Irish regulator reconsidering TikTok data-transfer ban after court ruling

Ireland's Data Protection Commission (DPC), TikTok's lead EU privacy regulator, fined the Chinese tech giant €530 million a year ago and ordered it ‌to suspend data ⁠transfers to ⁠China if its processing is not brought into compliance within six m...

Irish regulator reconsidering TikTok data-transfer ban after court ruling
Ireland's data watchdog will decide "in the coming period" whether ​to pursue fresh sanctions against TikTok ​after a court told it to reconsider an order that ​the short-video platform suspend data transfers from the European Union to China.

Ireland's Data Protection Commission (DPC), TikTok's lead EU privacy regulator, fined the Chinese tech giant €530 million a year ago and ordered it ‌to suspend data ⁠transfers to ⁠China if its processing is not brought into compliance within six months.

The Irish High Court paused ​the suspension order shortly afterwards pending an appeal by TikTok and while the court this month ​upheld the DPC's finding that TikTok breached EU privacy rules, it told the regulator to reconsider the corrective measures imposed alongside the fine.


Des Hogan, chair of the DPC, ​said the court had asked it to reassess the ⁠suspension order ‌because, in its view, the regulator had not clearly set ​out how ​it considered some of TikTok's submissions.

"We're in the process of reading ⁠the judgment, understanding where the judge thought that we should ​have considered those submissions in terms of process. That will ​now happen over the coming period," Hogan told Reuters on Tuesday after the regulator published its annual report.

Hogan said the DPC would then have a choice as to whether to impose sanctions and that if it did, the process would begin afresh, with TikTok having the right to appeal any new decision.
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In its May ‌2025 decision, the DPC found that TikTok had failed to show that any data accessed remotely by personnel based in China was ​afforded a level ​of protection essentially equivalent ⁠to that provided within the EU.

As a result of those shortcomings, TikTok had not addressed potential access by Chinese authorities, the DPC said.

TikTok said in response that it ​had never received a request for European user data from the Chinese authorities, and has never provided European user data to them.

A separate judgment regarding TikTok's appeal against the fine was shared with both sides on Tuesday to consider, the DPC said. A spokesperson for the court said the judgment will be published at a later date.
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