The News (New Glasgow)

Australian leader backs Zuckerberg’s grilling in Parliament

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Australia’s prime minister said on Thursday he would welcome Facebook founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg testifying to an Australian parliament­ary committee on the social media giant’s sharing of data with Chinese phone maker Huawei.

Leaders of Australia’s Parliament­ary Joint Committee on Intelligen­ce and Security have raised the prospect of the 34-year-old multi-billionair­e being invited to explain Facebook’s relationsh­ips with Huawei. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull supported the call for Zuckerberg to fly more than 12,000 kilometres from Menlo Park in California to face lawmakers in Canberra.

“I would welcome Facebook coming and testifying before our parliament­ary committees, yes,” Turnbull told reporters. “Of course, we’d love to see the boss.”

Huawei said Wednesday it has never collected or stored Facebook user data, after Facebook acknowledg­ed it shared such data with Huawei and other manufactur­ers.

Huawei, a company flagged by U.S. intelligen­ce officials as a national security threat and barred on security grounds from involvemen­t in Australia’s National Broadband Network, was the latest device maker at the centre of a fresh wave of allegation­s over Facebook’s handling of private data.

Chinese firms Huawei, Lenovo, Oppo and TCL were among numerous handset makers that were given access to Facebook data in a “controlled” way approved by Facebook, according to a statement Tuesday from Francisco Varela, Facebook’s vice-president of mobile partnershi­ps.

Facebook said it would end its data partnershi­p with Huawei by the end of this week.

It’s the latest privacy gaffe for Facebook since allegation­s emerged in March that a Trumpaffil­iated political consultanc­y firm, Cambridge Analytica, had improperly harvested data of Facebook users in an effort to influence elections.

The Australian committee, like a court, can summons witnesses to give evidence, although it is questionab­le whether a witness outside Australia could be compelled to attend. In practice, committees always invite rather than compel witnesses to attend hearings.

Facebook was asked by The Associated Press whether Zuckerberg would accept such an invitation.

Facebook replied with a statement on Thursday: “We will be providing the Australian government with more informatio­n about the device-integrated APIs,” referring to Applicatio­n Programmin­g Interfaces that enable servers to communicat­e directly.

The committee’s chairman Andrew Hastie and deputy chairman Anthony Byrne say Facebook owed answers to its 15 million Australian users.

“It is completely unacceptab­le that informatio­n from Facebook users has been slyly handed over to Huawei by Facebook,” Byrne told The Australian newspaper. “I want to know why Mr. Zuckerberg allowed this to happen. If need be, he will be invited to appear” before the committee, Byrne added.

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