The Peterborough Examiner

Facebook changes its privacy setting after controvers­y

- MIKE SNIDER USA Today

Facebook is updating its privacy settings to make it easier for you to control what you share — with the social network and connected apps — and tools to delete the data it’s collected on you.

The social networking giant takes this action after a consumer and regulatory backlash over the misuse of personal informa work,” tion of as many as 50 million Facebook users by data analysis and political ad firm Cambridge Analytica, which said it helped Donald Trump get elected.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg will testify before Congress about the incident.

Public outcry has built since reports in The New York Times and The Observer that Cambridge Analytica improperly received data on tens of millions of Facebook users who downloaded an unrelated psychology app, and data on those users’ friends, without their consent.

Facebook detailed some changes to its mobile app to make it easier to find and adjust privacy settings, the company said Wednesday in an online post.

A new Privacy Shortcuts section lets you “control your data in just a few taps, with clearer explanatio­ns of how our controls say Facebook chief privacy officer Erin Egan and the company’s general counsel Ashlie Beringer in the post.

Within the Privacy Shortcuts section, users can review what they have shared on Facebook — and delete it if they wish — as well as manage what ads are seen, and make their account more secure with two-factor authentica­tion.

A new “Access Your Informatio­n” section lets you manage your Facebook activity and download a copy of the data you’ve shared on the network. “The last week showed how much more work we need to do to enforce our policies, and to help people understand how Facebook works and the choices they have over their data,” the Facebook execs say.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada