Waterloo Region Record

Zuckerberg hints at testifying before U.S. lawmakers

- ELIZABETH DWOSKIN AND TONY ROMM

WASHINGTON — Facebook has signalled that CEO Mark Zuckerberg will testify before Congress by discussing the details of the appearance with lawmakers, according to a person familiar with the conversati­ons.

Three congressio­nal committees have invited Zuckerberg to testify, including the Senate Judiciary Committee for an April 10 meeting about data privacy. It is unclear how many hearings Zuckerberg will attend, and of which committees.

The congressio­nal hearings were prompted by revelation­s that data consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica had wrongfully obtained personal informatio­n on at least 30 million American Facebook users.

Zuckerberg stayed mum for nearly a week after the Cambridge Analytica controvers­y erupted, frustratin­g lawmakers and Facebook employees. In an interview with CNN last Wednesday, he answered the question of whether he would testify by saying that he was “happy to, if it’s the right thing to do.”

He added that he felt it often made more sense to send subject matter experts. “What I think we’ve found so far is that typically there are people whose whole job is focused on an area, but I would imagine at some point that there would be a topic where I am the sole authority on and that would make sense for me to do, and I’ll be happy to do it at that point.”

On Tuesday, Facebook opted not to make Zuckerberg available to testify before a key parliament­ary committee in the United Kingdom investigat­ing the same issue, which had asked him to appear. That panel’s leader, chair Damian Collins, previously accused Facebook of having “understate­d the risk” about the data it holds on its users — and whether it had been taken without consent.

Instead, Facebook said in a letter to Collins that it would send some of Zuckerberg’s deputies — chief technology officer Mike Schroepfer and chief product officer Chris Cox — in his place.

Cox is now slated to appear at a hearing in the coming weeks.

In the United States, the Senate Judiciary Committee, also asked the leaders of Google and Twitter to join him at a hearing in April focused broadly on Silicon Valley’s data privacy practices.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada