‘It’s legal’: Probe into Facebook and Apple spying rejected by Ireland

Ireland will not investigate Facebook and Apple for handing over data to the NSA because the practice is “legal.” An Irish watchdog says a data protection agreement signed by the companies shields them from legal investigation.
  An Austrian student activist group has challenged the Irish
  Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC) over data
  handed over by Facebook and Apple. They want a probe into the
  companies’ activities to assess their involvement in the NSA spy
  scandal.
  
  The ODPC has said it will not conduct an investigation as both
  companies signed a ‘Safe Harbor’ agreement. The accord means that
  the companies qualify as compliant with EU data protection law.
   
  
  "We do not consider that there are grounds for an investigation
  under the Irish Data Protection Acts given that 'Safe Harbor'
  requirements have been met," the ODPC wrote to Austrian
  activist group europe-v-facebook.
  
"If something is agreed by the European Commission for the
  purpose of providing safeguards, that ticks a box under our
  jurisdiction," said an ODPC spokeswoman told Reuters. The
  safeguard agreements are in place to protect the private data of
  internet users.
  
  In response to the ODPC’s statements, Max Schrems, the founder of
  europe-v-facebook said that the Irish authorities were trying to
  sweep the PRISM scandal under the rug.
  
  Apple and Facebook maintain their innocence in the mass
  surveillance program which gathers citizen data through their
  servers. They claim the NSA intercepted the information without
  their knowledge.
  
  The two internet giants’ involvement in PRISM has caused EU
  politicians to question the effectiveness of the ‘Safe Harbor’
  agreement.
  
  "The Safe Harbor agreement may not be so safe after all,"
  said Viviane Reding, the European Commissioner for Justice,
  Fundamental Rights and Citizenship.
  
  The existence of PRISM was revealed by former CIA employee Edward
  Snowden, who is now wanted in the US on charges of espionage.
  
  Following the disclosure of classified information that blew the
  whistle of the global spy program, Snowden fled Hong Kong, to
  which he had gone from the US. He is now holed up in Moscow’s
  Sheremetyevo Airport, waiting for the Russian government to
  process his request for temporary political asylum.
  
  Moscow has confirmed that it will not hand the whistleblower over
  to Washington.
  













