EU Ministers cool to privacy concerns

January 21, 2013 03:38 am | Updated June 13, 2016 12:56 am IST - BERLIN

European Union (EU) Justice Ministers have reacted coolly to a plan that would give consumers the ability to expunge the personal details that Internet businesses have collected on them, essentially allowing individuals to block most kinds of online ads.

During an informal meeting in Dublin, the Ministers expressed reservations about elements of the proposal, which would impose new limits on data collection and profiling and give national regulators the ability to levy fines equal to two per cent of sales on companies that failed to comply.

Alan Shatter, the Irish Justice Minister who chaired the closed-door meeting, said the Ministers were concerned that the measures would stymie the Internet’s development by hampering the targeted advertising that makes most free services possible.

“An overall conclusion is that there is widespread acceptance of the need for a uniform approach to regulation,” said Mr. Shatter at a news conference. “There is also a widespread understanding of the need to ensure that business can properly work under any new structure while ensuring the existence of certain protections.”

Ireland holds the EU’s rotating presidency through June, and Mr. Shatter is seeking an agreement among Justice Ministers on the proposal. The Ministers must approve the plan before a proposal is put to the European Parliament.

Europe last updated its primary data protection laws in 1995, when the Internet was in its infancy and the concept of mining consumer data did not yet exist. The legislative effort to produce an updated law is expected to continue into 2014. Mr. Shatter described the discussions with Ministers as “very interesting and considered” but noted that the conclusion of the group, at least initially, was that updated EU data protection laws must be “balanced and proportionate” and not stifle businesses. — New York Times News Service

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