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Facebook faces Federal Trade Commission privacy inquiry | Facebook faces Federal Trade Commission privacy inquiry |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The US Federal Trade Commission will investigate Facebook over how private data on millions of users was given to Cambridge Analytica. | |
The social network has been criticised for letting the analysis firm scoop up data on 50 million users. | |
The information is believed to have been used to help Donald Trump's 2016 campaign for US president. | The information is believed to have been used to help Donald Trump's 2016 campaign for US president. |
The FTC said its probe would determine whether Facebook had "failed" to protect users' privacy. | The FTC said its probe would determine whether Facebook had "failed" to protect users' privacy. |
News of the FTC probe, which former FTC officials say could trigger fines in the trillions of dollars - sent shares down 6.5% in afternoon trading in New York before they recovered slightly. | |
Tom Pahl, acting director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said it took the reports about user data going astray "very seriously". | |
He said the FTC regularly took "enforcement action" against firms that caused substantial injury to consumers by breaking laws that govern how personal information should be kept safe. | He said the FTC regularly took "enforcement action" against firms that caused substantial injury to consumers by breaking laws that govern how personal information should be kept safe. |
Facebook is required by law to notify users and get their permission before data is shared beyond their preferred privacy settings in what is known as the "consent decree". | |
David Vladeck, the former director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said that the penalty for each violation of the consent decree is $40,000. | |
If the data of 50 million people were indeed compromised, the social network's financial exposure to fines could run into trillions of dollars, Mr Vladeck told the Washington Post. | |
Rob Sherman, deputy chief privacy officer for Facebook, told CNBC it would "appreciate the opportunity to answer questions the FTC may have". | Rob Sherman, deputy chief privacy officer for Facebook, told CNBC it would "appreciate the opportunity to answer questions the FTC may have". |
The data was grabbed via an app that let people take a personality quiz. Although only 270,000 people completed the quiz, the app was able to exploit the way Facebook held data to get at information about millions more. | The data was grabbed via an app that let people take a personality quiz. Although only 270,000 people completed the quiz, the app was able to exploit the way Facebook held data to get at information about millions more. |
Facebook says it has changed its rules on user consent to stop other third parties harvesting data in the same way. | |
The social network is also facing a probe by UK data protection regulators and the European Commission. | |
The announcement comes after Facebook placed adverts in US and UK newspapers apologising for losing control of the data. | |
In the ads, Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg said the company could have done more to stop the data on millions of users going astray. | In the ads, Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg said the company could have done more to stop the data on millions of users going astray. |
"This was a breach of trust, and I am sorry," the back-page ads said. | "This was a breach of trust, and I am sorry," the back-page ads said. |
The company said it was taking steps to ensure the same type of data loss could not happen again. | The company said it was taking steps to ensure the same type of data loss could not happen again. |