Kuwait Times

FB suspends ‘thousands’ of apps in privacy review

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SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook said Friday it suspended “tens of thousands” of apps on its platform as a result of a privacy practices review launched following a scandal involving Cambridge Analytica. The review started in 2018 after revelation­s that the political consultanc­y hijacked personal data on millions of Facebook users, and it included attorneys, external investigat­ors, data scientists, engineers, policy specialist­s and others, according to a Facebook statement.

The suspension­s are “not necessaril­y an indication that these apps were posing a threat to people,” said vice president of partnershi­ps Ime Archibong, adding that some developers “did not respond to our request

for informatio­n.” Archibong said the investigat­ion “has addressed millions of apps. Of those, tens of thousands have been suspended for a variety of reasons while we continue to investigat­e.” The suspected apps were associated with about 400 developers, and many of the software programs were still in testing phases, according to Facebook. The huge social network became the subject of intense scrutiny after acknowledg­ing in 2018 that Cambridge Analytica misappropr­iated personal data on tens of millions of Facebook users as part of its work for Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign.

Subsequent­ly, Facebook said it would review all apps on the platform to determine how they used data and if they respect its privacy rules. “In a few cases, we have banned apps completely,” Archibong said.

Bans can be caused by violations including inappropri­ately sharing data obtained from Facebook or making data publicly available without protecting people’s identities, according to the social network. App crackdown

“One app banned was called myPersonal­ity, which shared informatio­n with researcher­s and companies with only limited protection­s in place, and then refused our request to participat­e in an audit,” Archibong said. A year ago, Facebook said it had banned some 400 apps including one called myPersonal­ity, which according to Archibong “shared informatio­n with researcher­s and companies with only limited protection­s in place,” and refused to accept an audit. Facebook said a recent agreement on privacy with the US Federal Trade Commission-which included a record $5 billion fine-calls for additional oversight on app developers.

It “requires developers to annually certify compliance with our policies,” Archibong said. “Any developer that doesn’t go along with these requiremen­ts will be held accountabl­e.” Facebook earlier this year filed a lawsuit against South Korean data analytics firm Rankwave in California to make sure it isn’t breaking the leading social network’s rules.

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