Albuquerque Journal

Report: FTC approves roughly $5B fine for Facebook

Levy is believed to be largest penalty FTC has imposed on a tech company

- BY TONY ROMM

WASHINGTON — The Federal Trade Commission has approved a roughly $5 billion settlement with Facebook that could end an investigat­ion into its privacy practices, a deal that could result in unpreceden­ted government oversight of the company.

The settlement — adopted with the FTC’s three Republican­s supporting it and two Democrats against it — could end a wide-ranging probe into Facebook’s mishandlin­g of users’ personal informatio­n that began more than a year ago, according to a person familiar with the matter but not authorized to speak on the record.

The FTC’s $5 billion punishment against Facebook sets a new record as the largest penalty ever assessed against a tech company that broke a past promise to the government to improve its privacy practices. The matter from here rests in the hands of the Justice Department, which typically must finalize FTC settlement­s, though DOJ rarely has upended them.

Facebook warned investors earlier this year it could face an FTC fine as high as $5 billion. Wall Street appeared to reward the company for setting aside a large portion of that penalty earlier this year, as the company’s stock rose almost 2 points following news of the settlement Friday.

The FTC declined to comment on the matter. Facebook also declined to comment.

The FTC opened its investigat­ion into Facebook in March 2018, responding to reports that the political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica improperly accessed personal data of 87 million Facebook users, which critics charged had violated an agreement Facebook brokered with the FTC in 2011 to protect users’ privacy. Cambridge Analytica developed a quiz app that harnessed informatio­n on those who installed it as well as their friends, a form of data collection that Facebook had allowed under an earlier version of its privacy policy. Such informatio­n may have helped Cambridge Analytica create profiles of users so that clients could better target people with political messages.

But the FTC’s probe quickly

expanded beyond the Cambridge Analytica incident to cover a torrent of other privacy and security abuses at Facebook, including the revelation that it had provided popular websites and the makers of some smartphone­s and other devices with access to users’ social data without adequately notifying them.

Under the FTC’s new settlement, the consequenc­es for Facebook could be vast: The tech giant may have to document every decision it makes about data before offering new products, keep closer watch over third-party apps that tap users’ informatio­n, and require its top executives, including Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, to attest that the company adequately has protected privacy. Facebook had agreed to broad contours of those terms as part of confidenti­al settlement talks with the FTC, the Post reported earlier this year.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Wall Street Journal report says that the FTC has voted this week to approve a fine of about $5 billion for Facebook over privacy violations. The report released on Friday cites an unnamed person familiar with the matter.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS A Wall Street Journal report says that the FTC has voted this week to approve a fine of about $5 billion for Facebook over privacy violations. The report released on Friday cites an unnamed person familiar with the matter.
 ??  ?? Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg

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