The Borneo Post

Facebook suspends 200 apps following scandal

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FACEBOOK said Monday morning it had suspended roughly 200 apps amid an ongoing investigat­ion prompted by the Cambridge Analytica scandal into whether services on the site had improperly used or collected users’ personal data.

Facebook did not immediatel­y provide detail on which apps were suspended or how many people had used them. The company said in an update, its first look since the social network announced the internal audit in March, that the apps would now undergo a “thorough investigat­ion” into whether they had misused user data.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said the company will examine tens of thousands of apps that could have accessed or collected large amounts of users’ personal informatio­n before the site’s more restrictiv­e data rules for third-party developers took effect in 2015. The company said teams of internal and external experts will conduct interviews and lead on- site inspection­s of certain apps during its ongoing audit. Thousands of apps have been investigat­ed so far, the company said, adding that any

Facebook did not immediatel­y provide detail on which apps were suspended or how many people had used them.

app that refuses to cooperate or failed the audit would be banned from the site.

The app used by Cambridge Analytica, a political consultanc­y hired by President Donald Trump and other Republican­s, was able to pull detailed data on 87 million people, including from the app’s direct users and their friends, who had not overtly consented to the app’s use.

The suspension­s support a long-running defense of Aleksandr Kogan, the researcher who provided Facebook data to Cambridge Analytica, that many apps besides his had gathered vast amounts of user informatio­n under Facebook’s previously lax data-privacy rules.

The announceme­nt comes ahead of a Wednesday hearing on Capitol Hill focused on Cambridge Analytica and data privacy. Lawmakers are expected to hear from Christophe­r Wylie, a former employee at the firm who brought its business practices to light earlier this year, though the Senate Judiciary Committee has not yet released a final witness list.

In the United States, the Federal Trade Commission is investigat­ing whether Facebook’s entangleme­nt with Cambridge Analytica violates its 2011 settlement with the US government over another series of privacy mishaps. Such violations could carry skyhigh fines. Across the Atlantic, meanwhile, the European Parliament is still requesting that Zuckerberg come testify in person. A spokesman for Antonio Tajani, the president of the parliament, did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking comment.

 ??  ?? Facebook’s Zuckerberg speaks during a House hearing on Apr 11. — WP-Bloomberg photos
Facebook’s Zuckerberg speaks during a House hearing on Apr 11. — WP-Bloomberg photos
 ??  ?? The Facebook logo is displayed for a photograph on an Apple iPhone.
The Facebook logo is displayed for a photograph on an Apple iPhone.

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