Waterloo Region Record

Exec says Facebook ‘has a lot to answer to’

- TARA DESCHAMPS

TORONTO — A Facebook executive admitted Wednesday that the tech giant “has a lot to answer to” in the wake of a scandal that allegedly saw user data mishandled.

Speaking to about 1,500 marketers at the company’s Canadian summit in Toronto, vice-president of global marketing solutions for North America Nada Stirratt said recent allegation­s that the data of up to 50 million Facebook users was misused by analytics firm Cambridge Analytica are “really concerning” and “have raised serious questions.”

For weeks, the scandal has had Facebook on the defensive over their data policies, with social media campaigns calling on users to delete their accounts and suggestion­s that Cambridge Analytica used the data to target voters in the 2016 U.S. election with political advertisem­ents based on their psychologi­cal profile.

“We are ultimately responsibl­e to ensure that things like that do not happen on our platform,” said Stirratt on Wednesday. “We let people down and we are deeply sorry for that.”

She said Facebook is “fully investigat­ing” Cambridge Analytica and any other parties involved with the scandal.

Those investigat­ions will extend beyond the incident to any other parties that might have mishandled informatio­n available through the platform, Stirratt vowed.

“If we can’t protect your data, we don’t deserve to serve you,” she said.

Stirratt outlined protecting user data, ensuring transparen­cy and addressing the spread of misinforma­tion as the company’s key priorities to rebuilding user trust and cited a wave of commitment­s previously made by Facebook’s CEO and founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Among them are a promise to inform people who may have been impacted by Cambridge Analytica’s data use and to audit apps that had access to Facebook data.

On Thursday, the company also said it would be updating its mobile app to make it easier for users to control their privacy settings.

Facebook said the update will consolidat­e settings that were previously spread across nearly 20 different screens into one easier to find area and will make it clear what personal informatio­n can and cannot be shared with third-party apps.

The changes will allow users to review what they’ve shared over time and give them the option to delete their data, but it is not clear when the app update will become available.

In an online post signed by chief privacy officer Erin Egan and deputy general counsel Ashlie Beringer, the company also says it is “proposing updates to Facebook’s terms of service that include our commitment­s to people.”

“We’ll also update our data policy to better spell out what data we collect and how we use it. These updates are about transparen­cy — not about gaining new rights to collect, use, or share data,” reads the post.

 ?? CHRIS DONOVAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Nada Stirratt, vice president of Facebook global marketing solutions, North America speaks at the Facebook Canadian Summit in Toronto.
CHRIS DONOVAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Nada Stirratt, vice president of Facebook global marketing solutions, North America speaks at the Facebook Canadian Summit in Toronto.
 ?? CHRIS DONOVAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Summit guest sare welcomed by people in Facebook shirts.
CHRIS DONOVAN THE CANADIAN PRESS Summit guest sare welcomed by people in Facebook shirts.

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