«Facebook's use and
abuse of user data for discriminatory purposes needs to stop.
securityweek.com - Facebook was aware more than two years ago of Cambridge Analytica's harvesting of the personal profiles of up to 87 million users and can not rule out other cases of
abuse of user data.
«Facebook's use and
abuse of user data for discriminatory purposes needs to stop,» Lisa Rice, president and CEO of NFHA, said in a statement.
WASHINGTON, April 6 — Facebook was aware more than two years ago of Cambridge Analytica's harvesting of the personal profiles of up to 87 million users and can not rule out other cases of
abuse of user data, chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said.
Facebook was aware more than two years ago of Cambridge Analytica's harvesting of the personal profiles of up to 87 million users and can not rule out other cases of
abuse of user data, chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said.
That made at least some form of leakage or
abuse of user data a likelihood, or perhaps even an inevitability.
Bipartisan calls for Facebook to testify on Capitol Hill intensified Monday as Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat who is influential on technology issues, sent a letter to CEO Mark Zuckerberg demanding answers about alleged
abuse of user data.
First announced amid a slew of updates Zuckerberg offered up in March as the scandal around
abuse of user data by the political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica was first coming to light, the new bounty program is modeled off of Facebook's attempts to combat hackers with a $ 1 million bug bounty.
Zuckerberg laid out a slate of changes Facebook will make to prevent past and future
abuses of user data by app developers.
Not exact matches
Zuckerberg faced tough questions on
user privacy, foreign meddling on the site and
abuse of social media tools in the wake
of reports that research firm Cambridge Analytica improperly gained access to the personal
data of as many as 87 million Facebook
users.
John Scott - Railton, who researches digital rights and privacy at the Citizen Lab at the University
of Toronto, said he recently thought back to all the PowerPoint presentations and papers he had given and seen that cautioned about how third parties might access and
abuse user data.
«Internet
users in the U.S. are left incredibly vulnerable to this sort
of abuse because
of the lack
of comprehensive
data protection and privacy laws, which leaves this
data unprotected.»
This week was full
of startling, scary news about how carelessly Facebook treated
user data, and how Cambridge Analytica, a political consultancy previously led in part by Steve Bannon,
abused access to that
data, possibly for Trump's presidential campaign.
She'd limited Zuckerberg's options to either admitting he was unaware
of conversations among leadership choosing to withhold news
of this
data abuse from
users (unrealistic), or admitting that leadership did not have those conversations (deeply troubling).
To be eligible for the bounty, the offending app must impact more than 10,000 Facebook
users and show a clear pattern
of abuse and not «collection» (in this case, I'm assuming
abuse would qualify as transferring the
data to a third party without permission).
According to SF Gate the company has been hit with four suits in federal courts so far this week following fresh revelations about how Facebook's app permissions were
abused to surreptitiously suck out vast amounts
of user data.
Cambridge Analytica's
Abuse of Facebook
User Data Shows Profound Impact
of Technology on Democracy
«Internet
users in United States are left incredibly vulnerable to this sort
of abuse because
of the lack
of comprehensive
data protection and privacy laws, which leaves this
data unprotected.
The 2018 revelations
of data abuse caused an unprecedented controversy for Facebook, which is the world's most widely used social network, with more than 2 billion
users.
In its blog posts, Facebook has repeatedly focused the blame on Kogan but conceded the
data abuse that took place was a «breach
of trust» with its
users.
On Wednesday, Zuckerberg finally broke several long days
of silence about Cambridge Analytica's reported
abuse of Facebook
data on 50 million
users.
The reason concerns the nature
of how Facebook handled its
users»
data before rising privacy concerns prompted it to tighten its policies against what critics have called an egregious kind
of abuse — allowing app developers to gain access to information not only on their customers but also on their customers» many Facebook friends.
Tuesday was also the first day
of F8, the social network's annual developer conference, where it was expected to address many
of the privacy changes and quality - control measures put in effect since it was reported that
data firm Cambridge Analytica allegedly
abused the private information
of up to 87 million Facebook
users for political operations.
Eliminating or even minimizing such
abuse of users» private
data fundamentally clashes with Facebook's primary business model, which relies heavily on targeted advertising.
Mark Zuckerberg on Wednesday finally broke his silence about the
abuse of data on the platform by Cambridge Analytica, promising to redouble efforts to safeguard
user privacy after the exposure
of the massive
data breach.
Cassandra Sheets, CEO
of the Center for Family Life and Recovery said «Center for Family Life and Recovery, Inc. is pleased to work with the other partners
of the Oneida County Heroin / Opiate Task Force to present this forum on Prescription Medications, as
data shows that approximately 80 %
of new heroin
users are coming to heroin after having
abused prescription opioids.
The number
of online love scams, increasing dating fatigue,
abuse of users»
data and increasing dating and relationship challenges are just some
of them.
While Facebook
users (& commentators) are being absurdly hypocritical as they virtue - signal how shocked & horrified they are learning how their privacy /
data has been
abused & exploited, in reality it always seemed inevitable this (or some variation
of it, i.e. social media is sad & bad) would happen.
But since it does access and store
user data (in the alleged interest
of protecting its own infrastructure against attacks and
abuse) it is essentially observing / warning that the government has declared a potential right to access those
data as well.
Facebook under fire after Canadian whistleblower reveals
abuse of data of tens
of millions
of users, Globe and Mail
According to SF Gate the company has been hit with four suits in federal courts so far this week following fresh revelations about how Facebook's app permissions were
abused to surreptitiously suck out vast amounts
of user data.
Two billion
users across the world give up their
data to Facebook and it has consistently
abused the trust
of those
users.
The reason concerns the nature
of how Facebook handled its
users»
data before rising privacy concerns prompted it to tighten its policies against what critics have called an egregious kind
of abuse — allowing app developers to gain access to information not only on their customers but also on their customers» many Facebook friends.
For example, it released on Wednesday the official number
of users (as much as 87 million) that could have had their
data exposed in the Cambridge Analytica fiasco and hinted that an even vaster number
of users could have been subject to similar privacy
abuses.
Among the measures he said Facebook will take, the company will investigate and look for any potential
abuses of personal
data by app developers on its platform that have had access to large amounts
of user data.
He noted that while Facebook already has privacy tools available for its
users, the company is trying to take a broader view
of its responsibility to protect them from those who may want to
abuse their personal
data or manipulate the platform to get greater distribution for fake news or hate speech.
I think this is an
abuse of users trust, regardless
of whether Facebook technically broke certain countries
data protection laws.
It's those kinds
of permissions that researcher Aleksandr Kogan allegedly
abused years later to gather
data on unwitting Facebook
users for purposes
of targeted political messaging.
Users and companies have reaped rewards from this
data, but this level
of abuse was only a matter
of time.
The raw
user data was acquired using Facebook's own APIs, though
abusing its terms
of service, resulting in
data harvesting from an estimated 50 million Facebook friends, who didn't know about the app or give consent, yet still had their personal info sucked up.
Taking nearly an hour's worth
of questions from reporters, Zuckerberg said Facebook up to this point hasn't taken a broad enough view
of its responsibility to protect
user data and prevent
abuse of the platform.
He did, however, acknowledge that Facebook up to this point hasn't taken a broad enough view
of its responsibility to protect
user data and prevent
abuse of the platform.
Tech companies sucking up large quantities
of data indiscriminately without explicit
user consent — especially in the intimate environment
of one's home — is one
of the primary fears
of privacy advocates skeptical smart speakers won't be
abused.
That argument would betray any claim that Facebook cared at all about
user privacy — as Zuckerberg seemingly admitted by describing such harvesting
of data by apps like Kogan's as an «
abuse»
of the
data - sharing feature, which was supposed to be innocuously «social.»
New Delhi (Sputnik)-- India has strongly warned
data analytics firms against any
abuse of social media in the country's elections, following reports that a British consultancy had improperly accessed information about millions
of Facebook
users to target US voters.
-- Germany's justice minister says she wants closer oversight
of companies such as Facebook, following a meeting with executives about the
abuse of users» private
data.
Germany's justice minister says she wants closer oversight
of companies such as Facebook, following a meeting with executives about the
abuse of users» private
data.
The head
of the European Parliament has announced that EU lawmakers will be launching a full investigation into the alleged
abuse of Facebook's
user data.
People began looking into the records because
of the #DeleteFacebook movement, which followed the revelation that the Facebook
data of 50 million
users was
abused by political
data firm Cambridge...
The treatment, or mistreatment,
of user data has been an issue on Facebook for a long time, but it has been recently thrown back into public attention by the actions
of Cambridge Analytica, a company that is accused
of abusing Facebook's
data to alter the public's perceptions on key issues.