EU court invalidates data-sharing pact with US, asks regulators to take tougher action to protect privacy

The case began after former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed in 2013 that the American government was snooping on people's online data and communications.
A demonstrator wearing a surveillance-camera shaped box on the head holds up a poster reading 'stop data preservation' as he attends a protest against the proposed US-EU free trade pact or Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership in Berlin on April
A demonstrator wearing a surveillance-camera shaped box on the head holds up a poster reading 'stop data preservation' as he attends a protest against the proposed US-EU free trade pact or Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership in Berlin on April

LONDON: The European Union's top court ruled on Thursday that an agreement that allows big tech companies to transfer data to the United States is invalid, and that national regulators need to take tougher action to protect the privacy of users' data.

The ruling does not mean an immediate halt to all data transfers outside the EU, as there is another legal mechanism that some companies can use.

But it means that the scrutiny over data transfers will be ramped up and that the EU and the US may have to find a new system that guarantees that Europeans' data is afforded the same privacy protection in the US as it is in the EU.

The case began after former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden revealed in 2013 that the American government was snooping on people's online data and communications.

The revelations included detail on how Facebook gave US security agencies access to the personal data of Europeans.

Austrian activist and law student Max Schrems that year filed a complaint against Facebook, which has its EU base in Ireland, arguing that personal data should not be sent to the US, as many companies do, because the data protection is not as strong as in Europe.

The EU has some of the toughest data privacy rules under a system known as GDPR.

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