Belgian court gives Facebook 48 hours to stop tracking Internet users or pay fine on per day basis
Belgian court gives Facebook 48 hours to stop tracking Internet users or pay fine on per day basis
If Facebook ignores the order, it would be required to pay a fine of 250,000 euros a day to the Belgian Privacy Commission.

Brussels: A Belgian court today gave Facebook 48 hours to stop tracking Internet users who do not have accounts with the US social media giant, or risk fines of up to 250,000 euros ($269,000) a day, a statement said.

The order follows a case lodged by Belgium's privacy watchdog in June which said Facebook indiscriminately tracks Internet users when they visit pages on the site, even if they are not members, the court said.

The same applies if non-members click "like" or "share" on a Facebook page, which leaves a "cookie" or Internet record on the computer despite them not being signed up to the site, the court said.

"Today the judge... ordered the social network Facebook to stop tracking and registering Internet usage by people who surf the Internet in Belgium, in the 48 hours which follow this statement," the court said.

"If Facebook ignores this order it must pay a fine of 250,000 euros a day to the Belgian Privacy Commission," it added.

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