The Cairns Post

Aussies in data heist

‘Outraged’ Facebook set to avoid controls

- JENNIFER DUDLEYNICH­OLSON

Australian­s have almost certainly had personal informatio­n harvested and sold as part of Facebook’s growing privacy scandal but national regulators are under-resourced and may be unable to prevent it happening again, a former privacy commission­er warned yesterday.

AUSTRALIAN­S have almost certainly had personal informatio­n harvested and sold as part of Facebook’s growing privacy scandal but national regulators are under-resourced and may be unable to prevent it happening again, a former privacy commission­er warned yesterday.

The news came as the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission refused to confirm whether it would investigat­e the unauthoris­ed use of personal informatio­n from 50 million Facebook users, and as the multibilli­on-dollar social network called an “all hands on deck” meeting amid legal action, user protests, and internatio­nal investigat­ions.

The beleaguere­d social network also issued a statement about its deepening privacy crisis yesterday, assuring users that it understood “the seriousnes­s of the issue” and was “working around the clock to get all the facts and take appropriat­e action moving forward”.

“The entire company is outraged we were deceived (by the sale and use of personal informatio­n taken without consent),” the company said.

“We are committed to vigorously enforcing our policies to protect people’s informatio­n and will take whatever steps are required.”

Neither Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg nor chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg spoke publicly about the data breach, however, that saw a university professor sell the personal informatio­n of 50 million Facebook users to Cambridge Analytics, which allegedly used it to influence US voters during Donald Trump’s election campaign.

The firm denies the allegation­s, though its board yesterday voted to suspend chief executive Alexander Nix.

Facebook’s market value has plummeted by $52 billion over the past two days.

But the social network is yet to see regulatory action from Australia and could avoid it entirely, according to a privacy expert.

While Australian Informatio­n and Privacy Commission­er Timothy Pilgrim said his office was “making inquiries with Facebook” to determine whether Australian­s were affected by the data breach, the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission declined to say whether the issue would be investigat­ed as part of its upcoming inquiry into digital platforms.

A spokesman said the commission would “review submission­s made to consider what issues to concentrat­e on” after their April 3 deadline.

But former Victorian privacy commission­er, now based at La Trobe University, David Watts said even though personal data was very likely taken from Australian Facebook users, regulators would find it difficult, if not impossible, to fight.

“It would be remarkable if there wasn’t one Australian with one US friend whose informatio­n wasn’t gobbled up with all of this data,” he said.

“But the regulators dealing with these issues have budgets in the millions and Facebook has budgets in the billions. Batteries of lawyers don’t come cheaply.”

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