[AfrICANN-discuss] Facebook and privacy

Anne-Rachel Inné annerachel at gmail.com
Wed Nov 30 21:50:09 SAST 2011


Facebook and privacy Walking the tightrope

http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2011/11/facebook-and-privacy?fsrc=nlw|mgt|11-30-2011|management_thinking

Nov 29th 2011, 21:44 by M.G. | SAN FRANCISCO

A FEW years ago, Facebook was forced to retreat from a new service called
Beacon. It tracked what the social network’s users were doing elsewhere on
the web—which caused a huge fuss because of the loss of personal privacy.
At the time, Facebook promised to make strenuous efforts to better protect
people’s information.

But apparently the firm has not been trying very hard. On November 29th
America’s Federal Trade Commission (FTC) released the results of an
investigation it had conducted of Facebook. They showed that the world's
biggest social network, which now boasts more than 800m users, has been
making information public that it had pledged to keep private.

 The FTC’s findings come at a sensitive time for Facebook, which is
preparing for an initial public offering (IPO) that is almost certain to
take place next year. Some recent
reports<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203935604577066773790883672.html>have
speculated that the firm may seek a listing as early as next spring,
and that it will try to raise a whopping $10 billion in an IPO that would
value it at $100 billion. To clear the way for an offering, Facebook badly
needs to resolve some of the regulatory tussles over privacy that it has
become embroiled in.

Hence the FTC's announcement, which came as part of a settlement struck
between the commission and Facebook. The FTC’s investigation highlighted a
litany of instances in which the social network had deceived its users. In
what is perhaps the most damning of the findings, the agency documents that
Facebook has been sharing people’s personal information with advertisers—a
practice its senior executives have repeatedly sworn it does not indulge
in. The FTC also says that the firm failed to make photos and videos on
deactivated and deleted user accounts inaccessible after promising to do so.

The settlement imposes a number of sanctions on Facebook. The company has
agreed, among other things, to an external audit of its privacy policies
and practices every two years for the next 20 years. And it has agreed to
henceforth seek users’ permission before making any changes that override
existing privacy settings. (In the past, the company often introduced
changes that made more data public by default, forcing people to “opt out”
in order to keep their information private.)

In a bid to minimise the fallout from this latest debacle, Mark Zuckerberg,
Facebook’s boss, took to the company’s
blog<http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=10150378701937131>to
apologise for the network’s failings and to claim that Facebook has
had
“a good history of providing transparency and control” over users’
information. Critics beg to differ. “Zuckerberg is walking a privacy
tightrope” by trying to serve both advertisers and users, says one
sceptical privacy activist. “Sooner or later he is bound to trip up badly.”
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