Los Angeles Times

Facebook makes it easier to find privacy settings

Move comes amid widening backlash to misuse of user data.

- By Samantha Masunaga samantha.masunaga @latimes.com Twitter: @smasunaga Bloomberg News contribute­d to this report.

Facebook Inc. said Wednesday it now will be easier for users to find and manage privacy control settings and see the informatio­n the social media giant has about them — moves that come in the wake of the widening Cambridge Analytica data-misappropr­iation controvers­y.

In another sign of the pressure Facebook is under, it plans to delay the unveiling of new home products, including connected speakers with digital-assistant and video-chat capabiliti­es. The devices are undergoing a deeper review to ensure that they make the right trade-offs regarding user data, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Menlo Park, Calif., company had hoped to preview the devices at its developer conference in May, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing internal plans.

Facebook said in a blog post that a redesign of the privacy control settings menu for mobile will make it easier for users to see what informatio­n can and can’t be shared with apps. After the redesign, those settings will be accessible from just one place; previously, settings were spread out across almost 20 pages, Facebook said.

The company also said it was adding a specific menu for privacy shortcuts. That menu will include options to turn on two-factor authentica­tion, manage ad preference­s and determine who can see informatio­n on a user’s Facebook profile.

“We’ve heard loud and clear that privacy settings and other important tools are too hard to find and that we must do more to keep people informed,” company executives wrote in the blog post. “Most of these updates have been in the works for some time, but the events of the past several days underscore their importance.”

Facebook also will add a feature called Access Your Informatio­n so users can see what they’ve posted and reacted to, as well as things they’ve searched for. The feature will allow users to delete items they no longer want on their Facebook page.

The company said that it will be easier for users to download the data they’ve shared with Facebook — including photos, contacts added to their account and posts — and that it would make updates to the company’s terms of service and data policy to better explain what informatio­n the platform collects and how it is used.

The announceme­nt of the changes comes about a week and a half after the New York Times and British newspaper the Observer reported that Cambridge Analytica, a data analytics firm that worked with Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, had gathered data from about 50 million Facebook users without their permission allegedly to try to sway voter opinions.

The data stemmed from a personalit­y quiz app developed in 2013 by a Cambridge University researcher. Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said last week that about 300,000 users installed the app, giving the researcher access to their informatio­n, as well as data from “tens of millions” of their friends based on Facebook’s platform settings at the time.

Zuckerberg said he learned two years later, from journalist­s at the Guardian, that the researcher had shared his data with Cambridge Analytica without users’ consent, a move that violated Facebook’s policies.

Zuckerberg said the company already had changed its platform in 2014 to prevent apps from accessing such large amounts of data.

But to quell the growing backlash to the controvers­y, Facebook has unveiled other changes, such as limitation­s on data access for app developers and a tool to allow users to see which apps they have authorized.

Zuckerberg also said the company would investigat­e all apps that had access to large amounts of user data before Facebook’s platform change in 2014.

But the social media company has continued to feel the heat from lawmakers, government agencies and users.

The Federal Trade Commission has opened an investigat­ion of Facebook, and the company said Tuesday it was in talks with congressio­nal committees that had requested Zuckerberg to testify before Congress about the incident.

Facebook’s shares rose 81 cents, or 0.5%, to $153.03 on Wednesday.

 ?? Andy Tullis Associated Press ?? FACEBOOK is redesignin­g the privacy control settings menu for mobile. Above, a data center in Oregon.
Andy Tullis Associated Press FACEBOOK is redesignin­g the privacy control settings menu for mobile. Above, a data center in Oregon.

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