Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Facebook hasn’t been ‘forthcomin­g’ about data breach, Sen. Warner says

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WASHINGTON – Facebook hasn’t been “fully forthcomin­g” as Congress investigat­ed Russia’s attempted meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election, Sen. Mark Warner, D-VA., said Sunday.

Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said on NBC’S “Meet the Press” that he questioned “the use of this really sketchy firm Cambridge Analytica,” but Facebook “blew that off” as they did other concerns over Russia’s actions.

Cambridge Analytica, which consulted on President Donald Trump’s campaign, siphoned data from about 50 million Facebook users as it built an election-consulting company that boasted it could sway voters in contests all over the world. Facebook also came under scrutiny last year after the revelation that Russians had used the site in its attempts to affect the 2016 election.

The revelation of Cambridge Analytica’s action has caused days of fury for Facebook and its co-founder and chief executive officer, Mark Zuckerberg. Two congressio­nal committees have invited Zuckerberg to testify, and he has said he’d agree if he is the right person to appear.

“The whole industry has been reluctant to accept the fact that we’re seeing the dark underbelly of social media – how it can be manipulate­d,” Warner said. “We’re still dealing right now with kind of fake posts and fake accounts.”

Facebook took out ads in multiple newspapers Sunday apologizin­g for what it called a “breach.”

Warner also said the U.S. should re-examine the claim, which is largely reflected in U.S. law, that social media sites “have no responsibi­lity Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA.), Vice Chairman, U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, questions witnesses on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.

for any of the content,” and Warner added “maybe you should be able to move all your data” when moving between sites.

On March 21, a bill to limit a website’s immunity for content when it knowingly facilitate­s sex traffickin­g passed Congress – one of the first imposition­s of liability for online platforms as the U.S. debates their responsibi­lity for what users post. Trump is expected to sign it into law.

Warner repeated his call for Zuckerberg to testify.

“He is the face of Facebook,” Warner said. “He in fact created this industry, and he needs to come explain to the American public and to policymake­rs.”

Zuckerberg should “explain how they’re going to work with us,” Warner said in a separate interview on CBS’S “Face the Nation.”

Facebook general counsel Colin Stretch was called before Congress last year, and Warner has said he now wants to hear testimony from Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey.

After last year’s hearings, Zuckerberg promised a “major ads transparen­cy effort,” including requiring political advertiser­s to include

a disclosure of their identities. Warner has said he wants Facebook to go further. The senator has pressed tech companies for more informatio­n about Russian meddling in U.S. elections, and called on them to harden their networks.

Questions remain about how Russia used Facebook to sway the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al campaign. An indictment by special counsel Robert Mueller described a multiyear effort by the Internet Research Agency, a Russian outfit, and others to shape American opinions, including by impersonat­ing Americans on Facebook, Instagram, Google’s Youtube and Twitter. About 150 million users saw posts from a St. Petersburg-based troll farm whose main purpose was to push Kremlin propaganda.

In addition to congressio­nal investigat­ions, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission is scrutinizi­ng whether Facebook violated a 2011 consent decree with its handling of personal user data transferre­d to Cambridge Analytica without users’ knowledge, according to two people familiar with the matter. It is also facing an investigat­ion in the United Kingdom.

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