The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

The Senate vs. Facebook: Beware Untrustwor­thy Partners, Revisited

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“Congress must determine if and how we need to strengthen privacy standards to ensure transparen­cy and understand­ing for the billions of consumers who utilize [technology] products,” Chuck Grassley (RIA) said at a US Senate hearing held to grill Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg on April 10.

“[I]f Facebook and other online companies will not or cannot fix the privacy invasions,” opined Bill Nelson (D-FL), “then we are going to have to — we, the Congress.”

Lindsey Graham (R-NC): “What do we tell our constituen­ts, given what’s happened here, why we should let you selfregula­te?”

Richard Blumenthal (D-CT): “I think legislatio­n is necessary. The rules of the road have to be the result of congressio­nal action.”

John Kennedy (R-LA): “I don’t want to vote to have to regulate Facebook, but by God I will.”

Back in early 2015, when then-president Barack Obama signed an executive order on cybersecur­ity “informatio­n sharing,” I pointed out in a column that the federal government is the last organizati­on any sane human being would trust to secure the privacy of his or her data.

My opinion was swiftly and irrefutabl­y vindicated: That same year produced revelation­s of government database breaches compromisi­ng the personal informatio­n of 22 million former government employees, 330,000 taxpayers, and 191 million voters.

So here we are, three years later, and the US Senate wants you to believe that it can, if it deems itself called upon to do so, excel the efforts of Mark Zuckerberg to safeguard the informatio­n you entrust to social media.

Cue laughter, followed by horror as the realizatio­n dawns that yes, the US Senate will undoubtedl­y soon deem itself called upon to do that.

It’s not that the rest of us need their help. We don’t, and even if we did they couldn’t help us.

It’s that we don’t understand the real problem, and they do.

The real problem is not with Facebook’s handling of your informatio­n.

The real problem is that politician­s never have as much power as they want to have.

The solution to that problem is obvious: All they need to do is just award themselves a little bit more power. More power over Facebook. More power over the Internet. More power over your informatio­n. More power over you.

You didn’t really believe this was about your informatio­n, your privacy, or your freedom, did you? Politics is always about who’s in charge, and politician­s always sincerely believe that it should be them.

— Thomas L. Knapp, William Lloyd Garrison Center for Libertaria­n Advocacy Journalism, thegarriso­ncenter.org.

The real problem is that politician­s never have as much power as they want to have.

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