Manila Bulletin

PH’s privacy agency opens investigat­ion on Facebook

- By BERNIE CAHILES MAGKILAT

The Philippine­s’ National Privacy Commission (NPC) is opening an investigat­ion on Faceboook following the admission of its chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg that data of 87 million or so Facebook users, including social media active Filipinos, was improperly shared with political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica.

In a formal letter, NPC ordered Zuckerberg to submit various documents, and full informa-

tion on the specific informatio­n fields exposed to data scientist Dr. Aleksandr Kogan and Cambridge Analytica on the part of the affected users to establish the scope and impact of the incident to Filipino data subjects.

The NPC also required Zuckerberg to submit documentat­ion and other evidence in possession on any abuse of data from 2012 to the present.

Zuckerberg was given by NPC 15 days from receipt of the letter to submit the documents. “Failure on your end to comply with these requiremen­ts will prompt us to take further corrective actions to protect the interests of Filipino data subjects,” stated the letter dated April 11, 2018.

An estimated 1.8 million Filipino FB users may have been improperly exposed to Analytica. This year, Filipino FB users are expected to reach 36.2 million, up from 29.88 million in 2016. This makes Philippine­s the world’s top social media user. FB is the most popular social media network worldwide with more than 2 billion monthly active users.

Data harvest “We are launching an investigat­ion into Facebook to determine whether there is unauthoriz­ed processing of personal data of Filipinos, and other possible violations of the Data Privacy Act of 2012,” an excerpt of the letter sent to Zuckerberg stated. The letter was signed by Privacy Commission­er Raymund Enriquez Liboro and deputy commission­ers Ivy Patdu and Leandro Aguirre.

The decision to launch a formal probe on Facebook was reached Thursday to seek more concrete actions from Facebook.

The privacy watchdog will particular­ly look into how Facebook shares the personal data of Filipino users with third parties.

It will also address the bigger picture of protecting the data privacy rights of the millions of Filipinos who use Facebook in their daily lives.

Zuckerberg admitted before lawmakers during a congressio­nal hearing at the US Congress that his own personal data was among those improperly shared with political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica.

Facebook has been consumed by this scandal since it came to light that millions of users’ personal informatio­n was wrongly harvested from the website by Cambridge Analytica, a political consultanc­y that has counted US President Donald Trump’s election campaign among its clients.

President Duterte maintained he ran a “simple” campaign in the 2016 elections which he won by landslide without the help of Cambridge Analytica.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, the former treasurer of Duterte’s campaign, declared “he did not pay anything to Cambridge Analytica nor did he transact with them.”

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