Facebook on Wednesday
launched a fresh effort to quell the firestorm over the hijacking of
personal data, once again unveiling new privacy tools and settings to
give users more control over how their information is shared.
The
new features follow fierce criticism of the social network giant after
it was revealed that the personal data of tens of millions of users was
harvested by a British firm linked to Donald Trump's 2016 presidential
campaign.
The company acknowledged that it needed to "do more to
keep people informed," but said the changes have been "in the works for
some time."
"We've heard loud and clear that privacy settings and
other important tools are too hard to find," chief privacy officer Erin
Egan and deputy general counsel Ashlie Beringer said in a blog post.
"We're taking additional steps in the coming weeks to put people more in control of their privacy."
The
updates include easier access to Facebook's user settings and tools to
easily search for, download and delete personal data stored on the site
used by two billion people.
Facebook said a new privacy shortcuts
menu will allow users to quickly increase account security, manage who
can see their information and activity on the site, and control
advertisements they see.
Facebook's terms of service and data
policy are being updated to improve transparency about how the site
collects and uses information, according to Beringer and Egan.
The
social network said it is also shutting down 'Partner Categories,' a
feature which enables more precise targeting of ads by combining
information from Facebook with data aggregated by outside companies such
as Experian and Acxiom.
"This product enables third-party data
providers to offer their targeting directly on Facebook," product
marketing director Graham Mudd said in a statement posted online.
Earlier this month, whistleblower Christopher Wylie revealed political consulting company Cambridge Analytica had obtained profiles on 50 million Facebook users via an academic researcher's personality prediction app.
The app was downloaded by 270,000 people, but also scooped
up their friends' data without consent -- as was possible under
Facebook's rules at the time.
- Lukewarm praise -
Yet some analysts said Facebook and its chief Mark Zuckerberg have made similar promises in the past.
"Zuck
promised easier, better privacy controls 'in the coming weeks' eight
years ago," Zeynep Tufekci, a University of North Carolina professor who
studies social media, said on Twitter.
"The solution isn't shifting the burden to the user because the problem is the negative externalities of the business model."
Jennifer
Grygiel, a Syracuse University professor of communications, said the
new privacy settings and tools "are so obviously important to users that
one has to wonder why this wasn't already done."
Dylan Gilbert of the consumer group Public Knowledge said Facebook's moves "are welcome steps forward" but "do little to remedy a larger systemic problem."
"Online platforms currently lack meaningful legal
incentives to protect users before their privacy is violated," Gilbert
said in a statement.
"Facebook similarly lacks business
incentives to engage in responsible data collection because disgruntled
advertisers don't have anywhere comparable to go."
- Deepening tech crisis -
Facebook's
move comes as authorities around the globe investigate how the social
network handles and shares private data, and after its shares have
tumbled more than 15 percent, wiping out tens of billions in market
value.
The crisis also threatens the Silicon Valley tech industry
whose business model revolves around data collected on internet users.
The
US Federal Trade Commission this week said it had launched a probe into
whether Facebook violated consumer protection laws or a 2011
court-approved agreement on protecting private user data.
Authorities in Britain have meanwhile seized data from Cambridge Analytica in their investigation, and EU officials have warned of consequences for Facebook.
Facebook has apologized and vowed to fix the problem.
On
Wednesday, six consumer and privacy organizations called upon Facebook
to cease all campaign contributions and election activity until they
ensure the integrity of all apps on the platform.
"A company whose
platform is self-admittedly powerful enough to influence elections,
must stay out of them," said a letter from the groups including Consumer
Watchdog, Electronic Privacy Information Center and the Center for
Digital Democracy.
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