HomeLatest NewsCyber SecurityAfter GDPR, EU now goes after bots and data harvesters

After GDPR, EU now goes after bots and data harvesters

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Years after it implemented Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) law, the European Union (EU) is now moving toward adressing the growing menance of bots and data harvesters. It has started rolling out tougher laws against online operators who play fast and loose with consumers, including those harvesting personal data or deploying bots to snap up tickets, reported AP.

According to the new consumer protection rules, which are likely to be implemented across EU in the next two years, the objective behind such driven move is to rein in rogue traders and online tricksters.

The new policy which will be implemented across every country in the bloc within the next two years will tackle some of the practices that savvy internet users are increasingly concerned about.

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According to the policy draft these measures will include:

  • Banning traders from using automated online bots to buy thousands of tickets for concerts or sporting events and then resell them at inflated prices.
  • Making sure price reductions are genuine by having sellers give the price of at least a month earlier as a reference.
  • Informing consumers when the price they are given online is based on their internet browsing pattern, so they know it might be higher than that offered to someone else on the same site.
  • Banning traders from having fake consumer reviews posted on their websites.
  • Letting consumers know how search results in online marketplaces and price-comparison sites are ranked, including whether the top results they see were paid for by merchants.
  • Having sites offering “free” services tell consumers about what personal data is being collected and how it is used — and giving them the right to cancel online contracts within two weeks.
  • The rules will impact online vendors who tap into the EU consumer market made up of 500 million people, including US internet goliaths such as , Google and Facebook, which have already run afoul of tighter competition and data-privacy rules in Europe.

“Breaking EU consumer rules on a large scale may cost a company a big fine of at least four percent of annual turnover,” EU Justice Commissioner Didier Reynders said in the statement adding, “this will be a sufficiently dissuasive and effective penalty to prevent dishonest traders from cheating.”

Meanwhile, EU commissioner for values and transparency, Vera Jourova, said, “I strongly encourage all member states to ensure that the new rules are implemented without delay.”

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The new laws will add to an expansion of consumer protection in the EU that has already seen Brussels impose rules to do away with phone roaming charges within the bloc as well as setting out compensation rights for airline passengers facing long delays or cancellations.

The directive applies to all EU members — though Britain is set to leave the bloc at the end of this month because of Brexit, meaning it has to decide whether or not to mirror EU consumer regulations in its own domestic laws.

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