The Oklahoman

Privacy policy

Facebook revealed Wednesday that tens of millions more people might have been exposed in the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal.

- BY BARBARA ORTUTAY AP Technology Writer

NEW YORK — Facebook revealed Wednesday that tens of millions more people might have been exposed in the Cambridge Analytica privacy scandal than previously thought and said it will restrict the user data that outsiders can access.

Those developmen­ts came as congressio­nal officials said CEO Mark Zuckerberg will testify next week, while Facebook unveiled a new privacy policy that aims to explain the data it gathers on users more clearly — but doesn’t actually change what it collects and shares.

Facebook is facing its worst privacy scandal in years following allegation­s that Cambridge Analytica, a Trump-affiliated data mining firm, used illgotten data from millions of users to try to influence elections. Facebook said Wednesday that as many as 87 million people might have had their data accessed — an increase from the 50 million disclosed in published reports.

Users will receive notice

This Monday, all Facebook users will receive a notice on their Facebook feeds with a link to see what apps they use and what informatio­n they have shared with those apps.

They’ll have a chance to delete apps they no longer want. Users who might have had their data shared with Cambridge Analytica will be told of that. Facebook says most of the affected users are in the U.S.

With outsiders’ access to data under scrutiny, Facebook outlined several changes to further tighten its policies.

Facebook is restrictin­g access that apps can get about users’ events, as well as informatio­n about groups such as member lists and content.

In addition, the company is also removing the option to search for users by entering a phone number or an email address. While this helped individual­s find friends, Facebook says businesses that had phone or email informatio­n on customers were able to collect profile informatio­n this way.

This comes on top of changes announced a few weeks ago.

For example, Facebook has said it will remove developers’ access to people’s data if the person has not used the app in three months.

Earlier Wednesday, Facebook unveiled a new privacy policy that seeks to clarify its data collection and use.

Although Facebook says the policy changes aren’t prompted by recent events or tighter privacy rules coming from the EU, it’s an opportune time. It comes as Zuckerberg is set to appear April 11 before a House committee — his first testimony before Congress. Separately, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and various authoritie­s in Europe are investigat­ing.

As Facebook evolved from a closed, Harvard-only network with no ads to a giant corporatio­n with $40 billion in advertisin­g revenue and huge subsidiari­es like Instagram and WhatsApp, its privacy policy has also shifted — over and over.

Almost always, critics say, the changes meant a move away from protecting user privacy toward pushing openness and more sharing.

On the other hand, regulatory and user pressure has sometimes led Facebook to pull back on its data collection and use and to explain things in plainer language — in contrast to dense legalese from many other internet companies.

The policy changes come a week after Facebook gave its privacy settings a makeover. The company tried to make it easier to navigate its complex and often confusing privacy and security settings, though the makeover didn’t change what Facebook collects and shares either.

Collecting texts, call logs, addresses

Facebook’s new privacy policy has a new section explaining that it collects people’s contact informatio­n if they choose to "upload, sync or import" this to the service. This may include users’ address books on their phones, as well as their call logs and text histories. The new policy says Facebook may use this data to help "you and others find people you may know."

The previous policy did not mention call logs or text histories. Several users were surprised to learn recently that Facebook had been collecting informatio­n about whom they texted or called and for how long, though not the actual contents of text messages. It seemed to have been done without explicit consent, though Facebook says it collected such data only from Android users who specifical­ly allowed it to do so — for instance, by agreeing to permission­s when installing Facebook.

Facebook also added clarificat­ion that local laws could affect what it does with "sensitive" data on people, such as informatio­n about a user’s race or ethnicity, health, political views or even trade union membership.

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 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg attends the 2016 Global Entreprene­ur Summit at Stanford University in Stanford, Calif. Facebook’s new privacy policy aims to explain the data it gathers on users more clearly, but doesn’t actually change what it collects...
[AP FILE PHOTO] Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg attends the 2016 Global Entreprene­ur Summit at Stanford University in Stanford, Calif. Facebook’s new privacy policy aims to explain the data it gathers on users more clearly, but doesn’t actually change what it collects...

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