The Oklahoman

Facebook faces UK fine over scandal

- BY DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — Facebook is facing its first financial penalty for allowing the political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica to forage through the personal data of millions of unknowing Facebook users.

The social media giant faces a 500,000-pound ($663,000) fine for failing to protect the personal informatio­n of its subscriber­s following an investigat­ion into the Cambridge Analytica data harvesting scandal by the U.K. Informatio­n Commission­er’s Office.

The proposed fine announced Wednesday is the maximum possible for the scandal, which first broke in March. While the penalty is small for Facebook, it is a warning shot for companies that now face fines of up to 2 percent of global revenue under European Union data protection regulation­s rolled out later, in May.

The announceme­nt came after an investigat­ion into Cambridge Analytica, which declared bankruptcy this year following allegation­s that it used personal informatio­n harvested from 87 million Facebook accounts to help Donald Trump win the 2016 presidenti­al election. The data allegedly helped the Trump campaign target political advertisin­g more accurately by giving them insight into what American Facebook users liked and disliked.

The agency is also conducting a wider inquiry into the use of data analytics by other political campaigns.

“Fines and prosecutio­ns punish bad actors, but my real goal is to effect change and restore trust and confidence in our democratic system,” Informatio­n Commission­er Elizabeth Denham said in a statement.

The penalty is a pittance for Facebook, which generates that sum roughly every seven minutes, based on its first-quarter revenue of $11.97 billion. But it would represent the first tangible punishment for the company’s privacy scandal, which tarnished its reputation, temporaril­y pushed down its shares and forced CEO Mark Zuckerberg to testify before Congress, but otherwise led to few lasting repercussi­ons.

The ICO announced its intention to fine Facebook after its investigat­ion found that the company failed to safeguard users’ informatio­n and wasn’t transparen­t about how data was harvested by third parties. Facebook will have the chance to respond to the findings before the agency makes a final decision on penalties.

Denham’s office also published a progress report on the broader investigat­ion, which includes a recommenda­tion that the British government introduce a statutory code of practice for the use of data in political campaigns.

‘We are at a crossroads’

She called on political parties, online platforms and the public to pause and “reflect on their responsibi­lities in the era of big data.”

“We are at a crossroads,” she said. “New technologi­es that use data analytics to micro-target people give campaign groups the ability to connect with individual voters. But this cannot be at the expense of transparen­cy, fairness and compliance with the law.”

Cambridge Analytica, a London firm financed by wealthy Republican donors, worked for the 2016 Trump campaign and for a while employed Steve Bannon, the CEO of Trump’s campaign and later a White House adviser.

Facebook said the company illicitly gained access to personal informatio­n of up to 87 million users via an academic intermedia­ry, although the firm said the number was much smaller than that. According to former Cambridge Analytica data scientist Christophe­r Wylie, the firm aimed to construct psychograp­hic profiles it could use to sway the votes of susceptibl­e individual­s.

Cambridge Analytica shut down its business in May.

The ICO investigat­ion found that Facebook “contravene­d the law by failing to safeguard people’s informatio­n” and didn’t inform its users “about how their informatio­n was harvested by others.”

Damian Collins, the chairman of the U.K. Parliament’s media committee, said Wednesday that the company “should now make the results of their internal investigat­ions known to the ICO, our committee and other relevant investigat­ory authoritie­s.”

 ?? [AP FILE PHOTO] ?? The chairman of the U.K. Parliament’s media committee says the government office that investigat­ed the Cambridge Analytica scandal has fined Facebook 500,000 pounds ($663,000) for failing to safeguard users’ data.
[AP FILE PHOTO] The chairman of the U.K. Parliament’s media committee says the government office that investigat­ed the Cambridge Analytica scandal has fined Facebook 500,000 pounds ($663,000) for failing to safeguard users’ data.

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