The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Facebook: Most likely had data ‘scraped’

- By Barbara Ortutay

NEW YORK » Facebook’s acknowledg­ement that most of its 2.2 billion members have probably had their personal data scraped by “malicious actors” is the latest example of the social network’s failure to protect its users’ data.

Not to mention its seeming inability to even identify the problem until the company was already embroiled in scandal.

CEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters Wednesday that Facebook is shutting down a feature that let people search for Facebook users by phone number or email address. Although that was useful for people who wanted to find others on Facebook, it turns out that unscrupulo­us types also figured out years ago that they could use it identify individual­s and collect data off their profiles.

The scrapers were at it long enough, Zuckerberg said, that “at some point during the last several years, someone has probably accessed your public informatio­n in this way.”

The only way to be safe would have been for users to deliberate­ly turn off that search feature several years ago. Facebook had it turned on by default.

“I think Facebook has not been clear enough with how to use its privacy settings,” said Jamie Winterton, director of strategy for Arizona State University’s Global Security Initiative. “That, to me, was the failure.”

The breach was a stunning admission for a company already reeling from allegation­s that the political data-mining firm Cambridge Analytica inappropri­ately accessed data on as many as 87 million Facebook users to influence elections.

Over the past few weeks, the

scandal has mushroomed into investigat­ions across continents, including a probe by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. Zuckerberg himself will be questioned by Congress for the first time on Tuesday.

“The FTC looked the other way for years when consumer groups told them Facebook was violating its 2011 deal to better protect its users. But now the Cambridge Analytica scandal has awoken the FTC from its long digital privacy slumber,” said Jeffrey Chester, executive director for the Washington-based privacy nonprofit Center for Digital Democracy.

Neither Zuckerberg nor his company has identified those who carried out the data scraping. Outside

experts believe they could have been identity thieves, scam artists or shady data brokers assembling marketing profiles.

Zuckerberg said the company detected the problem in a data-privacy audit started after the Cambridge Analytica disclosure­s, but didn’t say why the company hadn’t noticed it — or fixed it — earlier.

Facebook did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Thursday on when it discovered the data scraping.

In his call with reporters Wednesday, Zuckerberg said the company had tried “rate limiting” the searches. This restricted how many searches someone can conduct at one time from a particular IP address, a numeric designatio­n that identifies a device’s location on the internet. But Zuckerberg said the scrapers circumvent­ed that defense by

cycling through multiple IP addresses.

The scraped informatio­n was limited to what a user had already chosen to make public — which, depending on a person’s privacy settings,

could be a lot — as well as what Facebook requires people to share. That includes full name, profile picture and listings of school or workplace networks.

But hackers and scam artists could then use that informatio­n — and combine it with other data in circulatio­n — to pull hoaxes on people, plant malware on their computers or commit other mischief.

Having access to such a massive amount of data could also pose national security risks, Winterton said.

A foreign entity could conceivabl­y use such informatio­n to influence elections or stir up discord — exactly what Russia is alleged to have done, using Facebook and other social media, in the 2016 presidenti­al elections.

Privacy advocates have long been critical of Facebook’s penchant for pushing people to share more and more informatio­n, often through pro-sharing default options.

While the company offers detailed privacy controls — users can turn off ad targeting, for example, or face recognitio­n, and post updates that no one else sees — many people never change their settings, and often don’t even know how to.

The company has tried to simplify its settings multiple times over the years, most recently this week.

Winterton said that for individual Facebook users, worrying about this data scraping won’t do much good — after all, the data is already out there. But she said it might be a good time to “reflect on what we are sharing and how we are sharing it and whether we need to.”

“Just because someone asks us informatio­n, it doesn’t mean we have to give it to them if we are not comfortabl­e,” she said.

She added that while she no longer has a Facebook account, when she did she put her birth year as 1912 and her hometown as Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Neither is true.

 ?? NOAH BERGER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Conference workers speak in front of a demo booth at Facebook’s annual F8 developer conference in San Jose, California.
NOAH BERGER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Conference workers speak in front of a demo booth at Facebook’s annual F8 developer conference in San Jose, California.
 ?? JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Facebook said Wednesday that it has shut down a feature that let people search for Facebook users if they had their phone number or email address. In a call with reporters on Wednesday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company had tried “rate...
JEFF ROBERSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Facebook said Wednesday that it has shut down a feature that let people search for Facebook users if they had their phone number or email address. In a call with reporters on Wednesday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company had tried “rate...

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