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'Govt to decide on action in Facebook data leak case after CA responds'

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

will decide on the final action in the case after it receives the response from (CA), a government source said today.

The UK-based CA has been accused of personal information of millions of users illegally to help political campaigns and influence polls in several countries.

The has already sent notices to both the companies seeking detailed explanation on whether any misuse of data took place to profile Indians and influence their voting behaviour.

The US-based admitted earlier in the day that 5.62 lakh people in were potentially affected by the global data leak, involving CA. has over 20 crore users in

The source confirmed that the government has received the reply from acknowledging that data of Indian users may have been compromised, and added this makes it all the more important to wait for Cambridge Analytica's response now.

Incidentally, CA has sought an additional week to send in its responses to the Government, pushing back the original deadline to April 7.

The government will decide on the final action in the case only after it gets CA's response, the source added.

A high-powered panel under Justice B N Srikrishna (former of Supreme Court) is slated to meet tomorrow to deliberate on various issues related to evolving a robust data protection framework for the country, the source pointed out.

had yesterday admitted that data on about 87 million people mostly in the US may have been improperly shared with

The has said that while 335 people in were directly affected through an app installation, another 562,120 people were potentially affected as friends of those users.

"This yields a total of 562,455 potentially affected people in India, which is 0.6 per cent of the global number of potentially affected people," a said.

The company said it is "investigating" the specific number of people whose information was accessed, including those in It has also emphasised that the CA's use of such data did not have its consent.

The past few days have seen a global outrage over the breach of user data on Facebook, forcing the company to issue public apology.

Facebook's scandal also sparked a furore in with last month warning the firm of "stringent" action for any attempt to influence polls through data theft and threatening to summon Mark Zuckerberg, if needed.

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

First Published: Thu, April 05 2018. 19:45 IST
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