Los Angeles Times

Facebook didn’t tell users chats would be read

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Facebook Inc. confirmed this week that it ran a program allowing contractor­s to listen to and transcribe some users’ audio clips. The social network said the only people who were affected were those who agreed to have their audio messages transcribe­d.

That makes it sound like users agreed to have their chats read by third parties. But based on a look at the Messenger permission­s pop-up dialogue box, they didn’t.

In the Messenger mobile app, as soon as someone sends a voice message, they get a prompt asking, “Turn on Voice to Text in this chat?” Above the “No” and “Yes” buttons, Facebook describes the option: “Display text of voice clips you send and receive. You can control whether text is visible to you for each chat.”

There is no mention of human involvemen­t. Even in a separate informatio­n page in the app dedicated to understand­ing Voice to Text, Facebook explains that users can turn it off for each chat and prompts people to use it more. “Voice to Text uses machine learning,” it says. “The more you use this feature, the more Voice to Text can help you.” There’s no explanatio­n that machine learning involves more than just software code.

Companies such as Apple Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google have been relying on humans to check and improve their artificial intelligen­ce systems — they’re just not telling their users about it. That’s a critical lapse at a time when all of the companies — especially Facebook — are facing regulatory scrutiny for privacy lapses. The Irish Data Protection Commission­er, in charge of enforcing European Union privacy laws, said it was looking into Facebook’s transcript­ion practices.

“AI just isn’t at the level yet where it can interpret human conversati­on,” meaning the companies need to rely on monitoring to help train the systems, said Jennifer King, director of consumer privacy at Stanford Law School’s Center for Internet and Society. “But the big issue from my perspectiv­e is the non-disclosure. Users clearly don’t know it’s happening.”

The report on Facebook’s human transcript­ion program raised the ire of U.S. lawmakers, some of whom were already calling for stronger privacy protection­s than those imposed by a $5-billion settlement with the Federal Trade Commission, approved last month.

Sen. Mark Warner (DVa.) said the latest revelation about Facebook’s audio collection “is yet further proof that consumers’ expectatio­ns of how their data is collected and used radically differ from what companies like Facebook are actually doing.”

Some privacy lawyers suggested the lack of disclosure ran afoul of the company’s settlement with the FTC.

That agreement, which resolved known conduct before June 12, bars misreprese­ntations by Facebook about user privacy controls, third-party access to user data and how informatio­n is collected, used and disclosed.

“Absent some other disclosure to users regarding the human listening, I do believe it is likely this is a violation of the order in the case,” said Mark McCreary, chief privacy officer at law firm Fox Rothschild.

 ?? Tom Williams CQ Roll Call ?? U.S. SEN. Mark Warner, left, greets Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg at a Senate hearing last year.
Tom Williams CQ Roll Call U.S. SEN. Mark Warner, left, greets Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg at a Senate hearing last year.

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