The Sentinel-Record

China’s Huawei says it hasn’t collected Facebook user data

- GERRY SHIH

BEIJING — Chinese phone maker Huawei said Wednesday it has never collected or stored Facebook user data, after the social media giant acknowledg­ed it shared such data with Huawei and other manufactur­ers.

Huawei, a company flagged by U.S. intelligen­ce officials as a national security threat, was the latest device maker at the center of a fresh wave of allegation­s over Facebook’s handling of private data.

Chinese firms Huawei, Lenovo, Oppo and TCL were among numerous handset makers that were given access to Facebook data in a “controlled” way approved by Facebook, according to a statement Tuesday from Francisco Varela, Facebook’s vice president of mobile partnershi­ps.

The developmen­t marked the latest privacy gaffe for Facebook since allegation­s emerged in March that a Trump-affiliated political consultanc­y firm, Cambridge Analytica, had improperly harvested data from tens of

millions of Facebook users in an effort to influence elections.

On Wednesday, the former CEO of the now-defunct firm, Alexander Nix, clashed with British lawmakers as he denied his firm was unethical.

Nix said he’s embarrasse­d at having been caught on camera boasting that he could entrap political figures by compromisi­ng them with bribes and Ukrainian women. But he insisted he was entrapped by unscrupulo­us, undercover journalist­s — a claim Channel 4 News rejected. Nix added that the firm was unfairly blamed for putting Donald Trump in office, a vote that “put an incredibly huge target” on the back of his firm.

As for Facebook’s partnershi­ps with phone makers, The New York Times has detailed how Facebook has given device makers deep access to data, including work history, relationsh­ip status and likes on device users and their friends.

In a follow-up report, the Times said the recipients of Facebook data included Huawei and other Chinese firms that have long been labeled a national security threat by Congress. Facebook said it would end its data partnershi­p with Huawei by the end of this week.

While Facebook is banned in China, the government could have had access to user profiles elsewhere, including those of Americans with Huawei phones. However, there’s no evidence that happened. Facebook said it helped design and approved Huawei’s app, so it knows the data remained on users’ phones and wasn’t transferre­d to Huawei.

Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said the news raises legitimate concerns and wanted to know how Facebook ensured data was not transferre­d to Chinese servers.

Huawei spokesman Joe Kelly said in a text message Wednesday that the arrangemen­t was about making Facebook services more convenient for users.

Facebook said it granted smartphone access to users’ data before mobile apps became popular, as a way of making its service work on a broad range of devices. Device makers could then build their own software that incorporat­ed Facebook functions, for things like messaging or posting photos. User would log into their Facebook accounts, allowing the phone software to pull in data from Facebook itself.

The partnershi­ps were used for older phones to make Facebook work or at least work better, according to the company. Newer phones are more powerful and don’t need such data sharing. Nonetheles­s, Facebook didn’t get around to reviewing these partnershi­ps until after the Cambridge Analytica scandal developed.

Apple said it has worked with Facebook for years to let users share things on Facebook through iPhone and Mac apps. Apple said it used data pulled in from Facebook to let people post photos and other items on Facebook without opening the Facebook app. It ended that practice on the iPhone last September, although similar features persist on Mac computers.

Hua Chunying, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n, declined to comment on the issue but said: “We hope the U.S. can provide a fair, transparen­t, open and friendly environmen­t for Chinese companies’ operation and investment.”

The company, founded by former Chinese military officer Ren Zhengfei, has long denied that its products pose security risks even as it grew into the world’s largest telecom equipment provider and a leading phone manufactur­er — behind only Apple and Samsung.

Huawei and its Shenzhen-based rival ZTE have been the subject of security misgivings in the U.S. for years, but they have come under particular scrutiny since the start of the Trump administra­tion amid rising U.S.-China tensions on a range of subjects.

The Pentagon in May banned the sale of Huawei and ZTE phones on military bases, four months after AT&T dropped a deal to sell a new Huawei smartphone.

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