Albuquerque Journal

Rebuilding friendship­s

Facebook’s CEO suggests worst of scandal is behind

- BY MICHAEL LIEDTKE, BARBARA ORTUTAY AND RYAN NAKASHIMA

SAN JOSE, Calif. — With a smile that suggested the hard part of an “intense year” may be behind him, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed developers Tuesday and pledged the company will build its way out of its worst-ever privacy debacle.

It was a clear and deliberate turning point for a company that’s been hunkered down since midMarch. For first time in several weeks, Zuckerberg went before a public audience and didn’t apologize for the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which a political data-mining firm accessed data from as many as 87 million Facebook accounts for the purpose of influencin­g elections. Or for a deluge of fake news and Russian election interferen­ce.

Instead, Zuckerberg sought to project a “we’re all in this together” mood that was markedly different from his demeanor during 10 hours of congressio­nal testimony just a few weeks ago. His presentati­on also marked a major change for the company, which seems relieved to be largely done with the damage control that has preoccupie­d it for the past six weeks.

On Tuesday, speaking in San Jose, Calif., at the F8 gathering of software developers, Zuckerberg said to cheers that the company is re-opening app reviews, the process that gets new and updated apps on its services, which Facebook had shut down in late March as a result of the privacy scandal.

Zuckerberg then vowed to “keep building,” and reiterated that Facebook is investing a lot in security and in strengthen­ing its systems so they can’t be exploited to meddle with elections, including the U.S. midterms later this year. The company had previously announced almost all of those measures.

“The hardest decision I made wasn’t to invest in safety and security,” Zuckerberg said. “The hard part was figuring out how to move forward on everything else we need to do too.”

He also unveiled a new feature that gives users the ability to clear their browsing history from the platform, much the same way people can do in web browsers. Then Zuckerberg returned to techno-enthusiasm mode.

Facebook executives trotted out fun features, most notably a new dating service aimed at building “meaningful, long-term relationsh­ips,” in a swipe at sites like Tinder. After Facebook announced its entry into the online dating game, shares of Tinder owner Match Group Inc. plummeted 22 percent.

Zuckerberg got big cheers when he announced that the thousands of people in attendance would get Facebook’s latest virtual reality headset — the portable, $199 Oculus Go — for free. “Thank you!” he yelled.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg delivers the keynote speech at F8, the Facebook developer conference, on Tuesday in San Jose, Calif.. Zuckerberg pledged the company will build its way out of its worst-ever privacy debacle.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg delivers the keynote speech at F8, the Facebook developer conference, on Tuesday in San Jose, Calif.. Zuckerberg pledged the company will build its way out of its worst-ever privacy debacle.
 ??  ?? People attending the Facebook conference on Tuesday try the new Oculus Go goggles.
People attending the Facebook conference on Tuesday try the new Oculus Go goggles.

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