The Welland Tribune

Facebook settings to satisfy European rules

- DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Facebook is enhancing privacy safeguards for users around the world as it complies with new European rules designed to make it easier for consumers to give and withdraw consent for the use of their data.

Facebook is introducin­g the new policies this week in Europe, but eventually everyone on the social network will be asked to decide whether they want to enable features like facial recognitio­n and some types of targeted advertisin­g, the company said in a blog post.

“Everyone — no matter where they live — will be asked to review important informatio­n about how Facebook uses data and make choices about their privacy on Facebook,” the company said in a blog post. “We’ll begin by rolling these choices out in Europe this week.”

The announceme­nt comes as Facebook struggles with the fallout from revelation­s that a data analytics firm misused personal informatio­n from as many as 87 million Facebook accounts to help Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign. The European Union next month will begin enforcing its new General Data Protection Regulation, which explicitly applies to any company that uses the data of EU residents, no matter where it is based.

The privacy law is the latest attempt by EU regulators to rein in mostly American tech giants who they blame for avoiding tax, stifling competitio­n and encroachin­g on digital privacy rights. The EU says the rules are the most important change in data privacy regulation in a generation as it tries to catch up with technologi­cal advances since 1995, when the last comprehens­ive rules were approved.

The EU rules require consent forms to be written in plain language anyone can understand, as the EU targets the legalese buried in pages of terms and conditions that few users actually read before clicking “I Agree.” The regulation­s also require that consent must be as easy to withdraw as it is to give.

As part of the changes, Facebook users in Europe and Canada will for the first time be able to opt into the network’s facial recognitio­n technology, which has been available in most other parts of the world for the past six years, the company said.

Users will also be asked whether they want to allow Facebook to use data from partners such as apps and websites to tailor the ads they see, and whether they want to share political, religious or relationsh­ip informatio­n from their profiles.

“We not only want to comply with the law, but also go beyond our obligation­s to build new and improved privacy experience­s for everyone on Facebook,” the company said.

Meanwhile, the European Parliament renewed its call for Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to testify about the data privacy scandal, after Zuckerberg offered to send a subordinat­e in his place.

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