The Hamilton Spectator

Zuckerberg to meet EU officials — in private

- RAF CASERT

BRUSSELS — Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is expected to speak with leaders of the European Parliament next week about the data protection scandal that has engulfed his company — but might avoid a public testimony like the one he endured in the U.S.

The EU and British parliament­s have been calling for Zuckerberg to submit to an on-air grilling since it emerged earlier this year that a company, political consultant­s Cambridge Analytica, had been allowed to misuse the data of millions of Facebook users.

While Zuckerberg testified last month to the U.S. Congress, he had long been noncommitt­al on his appearance in Europe, sending his chief technical officer to speak to the British Parliament and delaying confirmati­on of any visit to Brussels.

On Wednesday, EU Parliament President Antonio Tajani confirmed that Zuckerberg “will be in Brussels as soon as possible, hopefully already next week” and would meet with parliament­ary leaders and an expert on civil liberties and justice. That suggests he will avoid an uncomforta­ble public appearance and instead meet only with the legislatur­e’s top brass behind closed doors.

Facebook came away largely unscathed from Zuckerberg’s testimony to the U.S. Congress in April. Shares in the company even rose after his appearance. And several of the U.S. lawmakers often appeared to fail to grasp the technical details of Facebook’s operations and data privacy.

He might get tougher questions in Brussels, where an assertive new European data protection law comes into effect on May 25. The law will give Facebook’s millions of European users more control over what companies can do with what they post, search and click.

Yet the question of whether Zuckerberg should explain himself publicly remains a point of contention. The president of the ALDE liberal group, Guy Verhofstad­t, said he would not attend the meeting if it was behind closed doors.

Tajani said that simply showing up to explain himself was already a good move. “It is a step in the right direction towards restoring confidence,” he said.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg speaks during a House hearing on April 11. He might be able to avoid such public testimony when he is expected to speak with leaders of the European parliament next week.
BLOOMBERG Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg speaks during a House hearing on April 11. He might be able to avoid such public testimony when he is expected to speak with leaders of the European parliament next week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada