The Columbus Dispatch

Facebook’s records show it wielding data access

- By Adam Satariano and Mike Isaac

Facebook used the mountains of data it collected on users to favor certain partners and punish rivals, giving companies such as Airbnb, Lyft and Netflix special access to its platform while cutting off others that it perceived as threats.

The tactics came to light Wednesday from internal Facebook emails and other company documents released by a British parliament­ary committee that is investigat­ing online misinforma­tion. The documents spotlight Facebook’s behavior from roughly 2012 to 2015, a period of explosive growth as the company navigated how to manage the informatio­n it was gathering on users and debated how best to profit from what it was building.

The documents show how Facebook executives treated data as the company’s most valuable resource and often wielded it to gain a strategic advantage. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer, were intimately involved in decisions aimed at benefiting the social network above all else and keeping users as engaged as possible on the site, according to emails that were part of the document trove.

In one exchange from 2012 when Zuckerberg discussed charging developers for access to user data and persuading them to share their data with the social network, he wrote: “It’s not good for us unless people also share

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