Yahoo's EU regulator to complete email investigation within weeks

Reuters  |  DUBLIN 

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Yahoo's European regulator said it is preparing to give the U.S. Internet company the of an investigation into the 2014 theft of data from 500 million users, including any remedial action to avoid a repeat of the breach.

said in September last year that hackers had stolen the data in 2014, prompting criticism from U.S. politicians into the delay in notifying customers.

Ireland's Data Protection Commissioner, the lead European regulator on privacy issues for because the company's European headquarters are in Dublin, told she would issue the report "in the next couple of weeks".

"We are preparing to serve the final report on EMEA Ltd and require of them any remedial actions we have identified," Helen Dixon said in an interview. It will be up to whether to make the report public, she said.

A new EU-wide data protection law coming into force in May 2018 allows fines of up to 4 percent of global turnover. Until then, however, the office of the Data Protection Commissioner said it has no administrative capability to fine a company.

A spokesman for said it has been cooperating with the commissioner's office on the investigation and will review the findings carefully when they are available.

(Reporting by Conor Humphries; Editing by Susan Thomas and David Goodman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Yahoo's EU regulator to complete email investigation within weeks

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Yahoo's European regulator said it is preparing to give the U.S. Internet company the results of an investigation into the 2014 theft of data from 500 million users, including any remedial action to avoid a repeat of the breach.

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Yahoo's European regulator said it is preparing to give the U.S. Internet company the of an investigation into the 2014 theft of data from 500 million users, including any remedial action to avoid a repeat of the breach.

said in September last year that hackers had stolen the data in 2014, prompting criticism from U.S. politicians into the delay in notifying customers.

Ireland's Data Protection Commissioner, the lead European regulator on privacy issues for because the company's European headquarters are in Dublin, told she would issue the report "in the next couple of weeks".

"We are preparing to serve the final report on EMEA Ltd and require of them any remedial actions we have identified," Helen Dixon said in an interview. It will be up to whether to make the report public, she said.

A new EU-wide data protection law coming into force in May 2018 allows fines of up to 4 percent of global turnover. Until then, however, the office of the Data Protection Commissioner said it has no administrative capability to fine a company.

A spokesman for said it has been cooperating with the commissioner's office on the investigation and will review the findings carefully when they are available.

(Reporting by Conor Humphries; Editing by Susan Thomas and David Goodman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

image
Business Standard
177 22