Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Audit clears Facebook despite data leaks

- Barbara Ortutay

NEW YORK – An audit of Facebook’s privacy practices for the Federal Trade Commission found no problems even though the company knew at the time that a data-mining firm improperly obtained private data from millions of users – raising questions about the usefulness of such audits.

Facebook agreed to outside audits every two years as part of a 2011 settlement with the FTC over its privacy practices. It is not clear from the report whether the company informed Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, which performed the audit, of the Cambridge Analytica data grab that would put Facebook in the crosshairs of Congress.

The heavily redacted audit by Pricewater­houseCoope­rs is available on the FTC’s website. It covers Feb. 12, 2015, to Feb. 11, 2017.

PwC declined to comment, but Facebook said Friday that keeping data secure is a priority.

“We remain strongly committed to protecting people’s informatio­n,” Rob Sherman, Facebook’s deputy chief privacy officer, said in a statement. “We appreciate the opportunit­y to answer questions the FTC may have.”

The fact that PwC found no issues raised red flags for privacy advocates.

“The FTC failed to protect the public,” said Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the nonprofit digital rights group Center for Digital Democracy. “Instead of conducting its own review to enforce one of its most important decisions – the consent decree – it looked the other way, which allowed Facebook to engage in serious misconduct.”

Chester said the audit shows that the “FTC cannot be relied on to really protect consumers.”

The 2011 consent decree bound Facebook to a 20year privacy commitment. Any violations of that pact could cost the company a ton of money. In his congressio­nal testimony last week, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg appeared uninformed about key details of the agreement, saying he did not remember if it carried a financial penalty.

Any violations of the 2011 agreement could subject Facebook to fines of $41,484 per violation per user per day. To put that in context, Facebook could theoretica­lly owe $8 billion for one single-day violation affecting all of its American users, or about half the profit the company booked for all of last year.

The agreement requires that Facebook users give “affirmativ­e express consent” any time data they haven’t made public are shared with a third party. Cambridge Analytica accessed informatio­n from so many users (the firm puts the number at 30 million, although Facebook has said 87 million) because it was able to access the data of people’s friends, not just people who explicitly permitted access when they took a personalit­y quiz. While Facebook did have controls in place that allowed people to restrict such access, they are found buried in the site’s settings and are difficult to find.

Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, a Democrat from Nevada, said during last week’s hearing that in her view, “these requiremen­ts were not met” because user consent shouldn’t have been buried in privacy settings. PwC disagreed.

“In our opinion, Facebook’s privacy controls were operating with sufficient effectiven­ess to provide reasonable assurance to protect the privacy of covered informatio­n and that the controls have so operated throughout the Reporting Period, in all material respects,” the report says.

Facebook is also under a separate investigat­ion by the FTC because of the Cambridge Analytica scandal. The agency is looking at whether Facebook has engaged in “unfair acts” that cause “substantia­l injury” to consumers.

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