Las Vegas Review-Journal

New Facebook camera invites skepticism concerning privacy

- By Michael Liedtke and Barbara Ortutay The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook is launching the first electronic device to bear its brand, a screen- and camera-equipped gadget intended to make video calls easier and more intuitive.

But it’s unclear if people will open their homes to an internet-connected camera sold by a company with a questionab­le track record on protecting user privacy.

Facebook is marketing the device, called Portal, as a way for its more than 2 billion users to chat with one another without having to fuss with positionin­g and other controls. The device features a camera that uses artificial intelligen­ce to automatica­lly zoom as people move around during calls.

Since Echo’s release nearly four years ago, Google and Apple have followed Amazon in releasing smart speakers designed for use with their other digital services — some of them, at least. These speakers can serve as hub-like controller­s for “smart” homes as people install appliances, lighting and security systems that can be controlled over the internet.

Portal represents Facebook’s entry into that fray. But pointing an artificial­ly intelligen­t camera into peoples’ homes could well raise other privacy questions.

“The first thing consumers are going to wonder is, ‘How much sensitive data is this collecting about me?’” said John Breyault, vice president of public policy of telecommun­ications and fraud at the National Consumers League, a Washington-based consumer advocacy group that has received donations from Facebook and other tech companies.

On Monday, Twitter users were quick to point to

FACEBOOK

Facebook’s privacy fallacies and what they saw as the company’s impudence in asking people to trust it with a camera called Portal inside their homes. Some compared it to the always-on, always-watching telescreen­s in George Orwell’s dystopian novel “1984.” Others saw the gadget’s appeal — but not if it comes from Facebook.

It’s a particular­ly trying time for

Facebook to release a home camera. Earlier this year, the company had to acknowledg­e that as many as 87 million people may have had their data accessed by Cambridge Analytica, a data mining firm that worked for the Trump campaign and aimed to use the data to influence elections. More recently, Facebook revealed that hackers managed to pierce its security to break into 50 million accounts .

Facebook says it won’t “listen to, view or keep the contents ” of video calls.

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