In legal filings on Friday, the Justice Department said the deal would bring 'substantial relief' to consumers and Facebook argued that the settlement would provide 'privacy protections far beyond those required by United States law.'
Facebook and the FTC have defended the record fine and settlement terms.
Under the settlement, which concludes a year-long investigation prompted by the 2018 Cambridge Analytica scandal, the social networking giant must expand its privacy protections across Facebook itself, as well as on Instagram and WhatsApp. It must also adopt a corporate system of checks and balances to remain compliant, according to the FTC order. Facebook must also maintain a data security program, which includes protections of information such as users' phone numbers.
Separately, Facebook agreed to pay $100 million to settle data misuse charges brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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