Houston Chronicle

Zuckerberg’s EU testimony set to be streamed online

- By Anthony Aarons and Aoife White

Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony to the European Parliament Tuesday on the Cambridge Analytica scandal will be broadcast live on the internet.

Zuckerberg agreed to the web feed after talks with Antonio Tajani, the president of the parliament. The proceeding­s, scheduled for the late afternoon in Brussels, were to take place behind closed doors.

“Great news for EU citizens,” Tajani said in a Twitter post. “I thank him for the respect shown” to parliament.

Zuckerberg will try to explain how Facebook data from as many as 2.7 million Europeans could have been passed to Cambridge Analytica. The U.K. consulting firm may have collected the data of some 87 million Facebook users and their friends for use by Donald Trump’s U.S. presidenti­al campaign. The revelation has been called a game changer in the world of data protection as regulators seek to raise awareness about how to secure informatio­n.

Facebook said in a statement that it was “looking forward to the meeting and happy for it to be live streamed.”

The previous plan to have Zuckerberg give a presentati­on in private had been widely criticized by EU officials, including EU Justice Commission­er Vera Jourova, who is in charge of the bloc’s new privacy rules.

“‘EU citizens have been most affected by the recent scandal and deserve to hear the truth,” Guy Verhofstad­t, a Belgian member of the parliament, said in a Twitter post seeking questions for Zuckerberg from his followers.

The 34-year-old Zuckerberg’s testimony last month to U.S. Congress was broadcast live and widely followed by the media and advocates for tougher data-privacy measures.

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