«We assure everyone that we are always examining
our processes around privacy, security and data - sharing with third parties, and always looking for additional measures that go above and beyond industry best practices to help maintain our users» right to privacy.»
Not exact matches
In science news
around the world, the European Parliament approves tighter data
privacy rules, a report from U.K. scientists criticizes the European Union's approval
process for genetically modified crops, and more.
Other things that could slip in there are issues
around privacy and when the landlord can have access to the unit, penalty fees, additional
processing fees or application fees.
It's not clear how robust of a
process this will be (they'll have to «sign a contract»), and it's not clear if Facebook intends to run audits to ensure compliance with
privacy measures — as it failed to in the Cambridge Analytica situation — but it's a start to preventing user data from being needlessly spread
around.
Years before the arrival of Kogan's turkers, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg tried to address
privacy concerns
around the company's controversial Beacon program, which quietly funneled data from outside websites into Facebook, often without Facebook users being aware of the
process.