Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Privacy and chat on Facebook

- Interviewe­d by Barbara Ortutay. Edited for clarity and length.

At Facebook, Stan Chudnovsky oversees the Messenger chat app that’s used by well over 1 billion people each month. He’s playing a key role in helping Facebook integrate that app with its other chat tools, WhatsApp and Instagram Direct.

The massive project has already gotten pushback from regulators worried about Facebook’s size and power. Government officials also worry about Facebook’s plans to extend end-to-end encryption to Messenger. Once that happens, Facebook wouldn’t be able to respond to law enforcemen­t subpoenas because it wouldn’t have a way to unscramble messages.

Chudnovsky, who moved to the U.S. from Russia in 1994, joined Facebook in 2015. He spoke with The Associated Press recently about his work and views on privacy.

What are the biggest roadblocks in bringing end-to-end encryption?

It’s technologi­cally hard to move from the system that is alive and functionin­g and has billions of messages being sent every day to where it’s done completely differentl­y architectu­rally. We also need to figure out how to do as much as we can on safety, while being the leaders on privacy. We are trying to go through that process slowly and very responsibl­y while talking to everyone.

How do you ensure that people are safe when you can’t see bad things people are doing?

We are going to continue to work very closely with law enforcemen­t on whatever we can provide. We also have connectivi­ty to social networks. Whoever is a bad player on social networks, we will be able to see if those bad players exist on messaging services.

You can send things in a private message that you can’t post on Facebook, right?

Definitely. You should be able to send whatever you want to send in a private message.

What if it’s illegal or hurting someone?

Generally we believe that conversati­on between people should be private. We don’t make a difference between the conversati­ons that are happening in the living room or on the phone and conversati­ons that are happening in a private chat.

What if you try to sell a gun, despite Facebook’s ban?

If you’re trying to sell a gun, you are probably trying to sell a gun to many people. When someone reports that and someone provides the messages that from the point of that person are illegal, then definitely we will be able to look at that.

Do you think scrutiny of Facebook will ease any time soon?

We have a lot of responsibi­lity. And the criticism, sometimes it’s accurate. Sometimes it’s not accurate. At the end of the day, what it means if everyone’s talking about you positively or negatively or both, is that you’re important. We just need to continue to deliver value to people. And as long as we are building products that people like. I think it’s going to be fine.

 ??  ?? Stan Chudnovsky
Vice President of Messenger Facebook
Stan Chudnovsky Vice President of Messenger Facebook

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States