A German court
has ruled that eight provisions in Apple's privacy policy are inapplicable
because they run afoul of German consumer protection laws, reports Bloomberg.
The lawsuit,
between Apple and consumer protection group Verbraucherzentrale Bundesverband
(VZBV), related to Apple's request of its users for 'global consent' to use
customers' data.
The German court
appears to have struck down blanket policies that allow Apple to share personal
information with other companies or use it for advertising, regardless of what
the ultimate purpose is. Instead, to comply with German law, Apple will need to
be more explicit about exactly what information is being shared, and what it
will be used for.
A Berlin
court struck down eight of 15 provisions in Apple’s general data-use terms
because they deviate too much from German laws, a consumer group said in a
statement on its website today. The court said Apple can’t ask for “global
consent” to use customer data or use information on the locations of customers.
Apple had
previously agreed to void the other seven provisions that the VZBV had flagged
as problematic. Instead, the company will need to let customers know "in
detail what data is used for what purpose", instead of a single
"global consent".
The full report
is available in German
from VZBV's website, or via Google Translate. It should be noted that this ruling only
applies to Germany, not to the entire European Union. [Source]
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