Dayton Daily News

Record Facebook fine won’t end scrutiny of the company

- By Barbara Ortutay

Facebook SAN FRANCISCO — survived its latest brush with U.S. privacy regulators, at the cost of a record $5 billion fine and other restrictio­ns imposed by the Federal Trade Commission. But it’s far from home free.

While the company looks set to prosper in the wake of the FTC case, it faces a series of other investigat­ions into its privacy practices in Europe and across the U.S. Concerns over the limits of the just-settled probe could fuel efforts to craft tougher privacy laws at the state and federal level.

The social network is also gearing up to fight investigat­ions into its allegedly anticompet­itive behavior, such as Facebook’s habit of buying would-be rivals like Instagram and blatantly duplicatin­g features introduced by competing services.

The Department of Justice opened a broad antitrust probe focused on technology companies on Tuesday. On Wednesday Facebook disclosed that it also faces a fresh FTC investigat­ion into alleged anticompet­itive behavior. It didn’t provide details of the scope or focus of the probe. Representa­tives of the FTC confirmed the antitrust investigat­ion but offered no additional informatio­n.

The outcome of these investigat­ions may well determine whether the world’s government­s can actually rein in a transnatio­nal corporatio­n that directly touches almost a third of the world’s population.

“There is a lot more to come on the regulatory front for Facebook,” said Debra Aho Williamson, analyst with the research firm eMarketer. To pre-empt this and do things on its own terms, Williamson said the company is “going to do whatever it can” to change its business model and change the way it gathers data.

The FTC penalties, viewed by some as a stunning rebuke to the social network, might well crush a smaller firm. But they seem unlikely to faze Facebook — the fine, for instance, amounts to less than 10% of Facebook’s annual revenue and not even a quarter of its annual profits. Some critics charge that that the FTC didn’t deliver much more than a slap on the wrist.

“Facebook makes that much money in a couple of weeks,” said Siva Vaidhyanat­han, a University of Virginia professor and author of “Antisocial Media: How Facebook Disconnect­s Us and Undermines Democracy.” The company is free to “get back to business as usual,” he said.

Wall Street seems to agree. Facebook’s stock price climbed higher Wednesday after the deal was announced. The company is worth much more than it was when its Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal erupted back in March 2018. On Wednesday, Facebook’s market value hovered around $575 billion — roughly $40 billion above where it stood before the news of the Cambridge abuses broke.

Ashkan Soltani, a former FTC chief technologi­st, said the settlement was effectivel­y “a get-out-of-jail free card for Facebook.” The deal absolves Facebook of any consumer-protection claims prior to June 12 of this year, a highly unusual step that effectivel­y wipes the slate clean where known historical privacy violations are concerned.

Soltani and other critics also note that the FTC settlement barely touches Facebook’s underlying business practices, which rely on the collection and analysis of its users’ activities and personal details to fuel the company’s lucrative advertisin­g machine. In its formal legal complaint, the FTC used the word “deceptive” 14 times to describe Facebook’s practices and policies.

“There is a lot more to come on the regulatory front for Facebook,” said Debra Aho Williamson, analyst with the research firm eMarketer. To pre-empt this and do things on its own terms, Williamson said the company is “going to do whatever it can” to change its business model and the way it gathers data.

Facebook has already signaled that this is coming. Earlier this year, CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a new “privacy focused” vision for the company that centers on private messaging and encrypted communicat­ions. The details are scant. But it shows that the company is thinking years into the future even as regulators are investigat­ing and punishing it for years-past violations.

As part of the FTC’s settlement with Facebook, Zuckerberg will have to personally certify his company’s compliance with its privacy programs. The FTC said that false certificat­ions could expose him to civil or criminal penalties. But the settlement did not hold Zuckerberg personally liable for the past violations, as some had expected.

In a Facebook post Wednesday, Zuckerberg vowed to “make some major structural changes to how we build products and run this company” as a result of the settlement. “We have a responsibi­lity to protect people’s privacy. We already work hard to live up to this responsibi­lity, but now we’re going to set a completely new standard for our industry.”

In a similar tone, FTC Chairman Joe Simons, speaking at a news conference, said the settlement is “unpreceden­ted in the history of the FTC” and is designed “to change Facebook’s entire privacy culture to decrease the likelihood of continued violations.”

Simons, however, acknowledg­ed that the FTC’s powers were limited. It could not, for instance, fine Facebook $10 billion or target Zuckerberg personally for investigat­ion. “We cannot impose such things by our own fiat,” he said at a news conference following release of the settlement.

 ?? ERIC THAYER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, testifies before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Capitol Hill on Sept. 5, 2018.
ERIC THAYER / THE NEW YORK TIMES Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook’s chief operating officer, testifies before the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee on Capitol Hill on Sept. 5, 2018.

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