Business Standard

FB reveals tighter security settings to protect user privacy

- GERRIT DE VYNCK

Facebook said it will make it more straight-forward for users to change their privacy settings and delete data they’ve already shared with the social-media company.

The announceme­nt is part of Facebook’s efforts to answer the firestorm of criticism that’s arisen in the wake of revelation­s that data from 50 million people was accessed by political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica without their permission. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg plans to testify in front of the U.S. Congress in the coming weeks, and the company has delayed unveiling a new home speaker product to reevaluate how it uses user data, according to people familiar with the matter.

Shares were up 1.9 percent in early trading at 7:36 a.m. in New York. The social-media giant’s stock has fallen 18 percent since the Cambridge Analytica news broke earlier this month.

Most of the security page updates have been in the works for some time, Facebook Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan and Deputy General Counsel Ashlie Beringerwr­ote in a statement Wednesday, “but the events of the past several days underscore their importance.” The new system will allow users to access settings from a single place instead of having to go to some 20 different screens.

Facebook has produced multiple iterations to its privacy settings pages over the years, often in response to criticism that the system is too complicate­d for most people to understand what

they are and aren’t sharing. From the new setting page, people will be able to delete specific things they’ve shared or liked in the past, stopping advertiser­s from having access to that informatio­n.

Users still won’t be able to delete data that they had given third-party apps on the platform previously, even if it was used for reasons other than what users agreed to. That data, downloaded over years of Facebook users freely giving apps such as games and personalit­y quizzes access to their informatio­n, is largely still stored outside of Facebook’s grasp by the private individual­s and companies who built those applicatio­ns.

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