Expert says Facebook audience targeting illegal

New service allows companies to spam user’s walls with ads

In amongst mundane updates about what your friends had for lunch and the latest pictures of their kids, Facebook users are now being bombarded with targeted ads.

The ads are the result of the new Custom Audience Targeting (CAT) platform that Facebook is supplying to advertisers.

On their developer website, Facebook says that CAT “allow[s] advertisers to target their Sponsored Story or Ad to a specific set of users with whom they have already established a relationship on/off Facebook. Audiences can be defined by either user email addresses, Facebook user IDs or user phone numbers.”

The aim is to identify customers who also have a Facebook account and allow a company to target ads to people who have shown pervious interest in its product. But according to a Danish expert on data protection, the new platform runs afoul of the law.

"That would clearly be illegal unless companies have been specifically allowed by their customers to disclose information to third parties,” Charlotte Bagger Tranberg, an associate professor at the School of Law at Aalborg University, told Politiken newspaper.  

Tranberg said a company may collect customer information order to market itself, but it would be  a violation of the Personal Data Protection Act to release that information to another company unless the customer had given their explicit consent.

Facebook said that the personal data it collects, such as customers' email addresses and phone numbers, is encrypted and that it is impossible to single out individual users before their data is collated with Facebook's own data. They said that ads are not targeted at individuals, but instead to groups of 20 people who meet criteria that an advertiser has formulated – for example, men in a specific geographical area between the ages of 20-50.

"We are dealing with encrypted data from a larger group of people and not with personally identifiable data," Jan Fredriksson, a spokesman for Facebook's Nordic region, told Politiken. “Neither Facebook nor the advertisers are holding on to more data than before.”

“Whether or not Facebook encrypts the information, it is still used to target individuals who have given their data to a particular company,” said Tranberg. “Encryption does not solve the problem.”

According to Fredriksson, it is ultimately up to the companies using the new method to ensure that they comply with national privacy legislation. He called it "an effective tool when it comes to reach their customers on Facebook".

Consumers have long been targeted with ads based on their online behaviour, but Anette Høyrup, a lawyer for Forbrugerrådet, the consumer council, said that companies are widening their nets

“What has changed is now you get advertisements that not only reflect your online behaviour, but also your behaviour in the physical world,” Høyrup told Politiken. “If you have purchased an item in a local store and given your address, you now run the risk that the store will find you on Facebook.”

Høyrup says that Facebook’s decision to go public has forced the company to find new ways to earn money.




  • The Lynch Interviews: Fergal O’Byrne

    The Lynch Interviews: Fergal O’Byrne

    English-Australian writer and theatre director Stuart Lynch contributes a monthly column titled “The Lynch Interviews”. In this series, he engages with prominent internationals residing in Denmark or Danish individuals with a global perspective. For April, he interviews Irish playwright and writer Fergal O’Byrne, fresh from an acclaimed season of a new English-language play in Copenhagen.

  • Why your talented internationals aren’t moving up the ladder – and what to do about it

    Why your talented internationals aren’t moving up the ladder – and what to do about it

    Many internationals find it difficult to advance in their new workplaces, and some quietly leave. It’s not because they lack talent. In Denmark, careers are shaped not only by skills but also by cultural understanding, informal networks, and social signals. However, internationals may not be familiar with this system or know how to navigate it

  • The international behind Donkey Republic: how a Turkish systems thinker reimagined urban mobility in Denmark

    The international behind Donkey Republic: how a Turkish systems thinker reimagined urban mobility in Denmark

    Erdem Ovacık, co-founder of Donkey Republic, built one of Europe’s leading bike-sharing companies from Denmark — but success as an international entrepreneur hasn’t come easy

  • Denmark hits 66.2 million overnight stays: what’s fueling the rise?

    Denmark hits 66.2 million overnight stays: what’s fueling the rise?

    In 2024, Denmark saw 1.5 million more overnight stays than in 2023, bringing the total to 66.2 million staying in hotels, holiday centers, campsites, and youth hostels. It’s clear: after COVID-19, traveling is now back on the table. But the question is: why are people choosing Denmark?

  • World Cup in Ice Hockey will face off in Herning

    World Cup in Ice Hockey will face off in Herning

    As in 2018, Denmark will co-host the Ice Hockey World Championship. And once again, Herning and Jyske Bank Boxen will be the hosts. Denmark is in Pool B and starts tonight with a match against the USA, which, given the political tensions between the two countries, may be an icy affair.

  • Diplomatic tensions between US and Denmark after spying rumors

    Diplomatic tensions between US and Denmark after spying rumors

    A Wall Street Journal article describes that the US will now begin spying in Greenland. This worries the Danish foreign minister, who wants an explanation from the US’s leading diplomat. Greenlandic politicians think that Trump’s actions increase the sense of insecurity

Connect Club is your gateway to a vibrant programme of events and an international community in Denmark.