The Facebook faces a £500.000 fine in the UK for his role in the leak scandal data through the Cambridge Analytica.
On Wednesday, the UK Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) announced that the fine was the maximum allowed under UK law for two breaches of data protection law. 1998 data.
The UK data monitoring agency also intends to initiate a criminal prosecution against SCL Elections Ltd, Cambridge Analytica's parent company, because it did not respond properly to the ICO survey.
Cambridge Analytica's data collection from Facebook users affected 87 millions of users in the US, UK and other countries. So it was only natural for them to be the focus of an ICO research.
The information "unfairly shared" with the company, without the user's consent. According to an investigation published by Elizabeth Denham on the ICO the agency concluded that "Facebook broke the law by failing to safeguard its members' information […], and the company failed to be transparent about how the data was collected." from others."
Facebook will have the opportunity to respond to ICO's findings after announcing the final decision to finalize 500.000 pounds.
The biggest social network told the BBC that the company would respond "very soon".
"Confidence in the integrity of our democratic processes is in jeopardy because the average voter has no idea what is going on behind the scenes," Denham said.
"New technologies use analytical data from different people, providing campaign teams with the ability to connect (influence) individual voters. "But this should not be to the detriment of transparency, justice and compliance with the law."
The Commissioner added that fines and prosecutions are part of the process, but that the ICO's real intention is to "brings change and restore confidence in our democratic system. "
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