Calgary Herald

EU Parliament to put Zuckerberg on hot seat over Facebook scandal

- STEPHANIE BODONI

LUXEMBOURG Facebook Inc. chief executive Mark Zuckerberg has agreed to face a grilling from European Union lawmakers over how the data of as many as 2.7 million Europeans could have ended up in the hands of consulting firm Cambridge Analytica.

European Parliament President Antonio Tajani on Wednesday said Zuckerberg had accepted the EU institutio­n’s invitation to travel across the Atlantic and face lawmakers in person as soon as next week.

The meeting will take place in private, the assembly’s press service said.

“Our citizens deserve a full and detailed explanatio­n,” Tajani said in a statement posted on Twitter. “I welcome Mark Zuckerberg ’s decision to appear in person before the representa­tives of 500 million Europeans. It is a step in the right direction toward restoring confidence.”

The revelation­s that the data of some 87 million Facebook users and their friends may have been misused by the consulting firm that worked on Donald Trump’s U.S. presidenti­al campaign, has been called a game changer in the world of data protection as regulators seek to raise awareness about how to secure informatio­n. The European Commission, the EU’s executive agency, has used the scandal as an example of why its strict new privacy rules kicking in at the end of next week are justified.

Facebook, in an emailed statement, said it accepted the “proposal to meet with leaders of the European Parliament and appreciate the opportunit­y for dialogue, to listen to their views and show the steps we are taking to better protect people’s privacy.”

The Parliament will separately organize a hearing with Facebook representa­tives to examine data protection that will also look at the potential impact on the election process.

The news comes a month after the Parliament invited Zuckerberg to appear before three of the assembly’s committees.

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Mark Zuckerberg

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