Deccan Chronicle

FB’s privacy lapses may result in record penalty

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Washington, Jan. 20: Facebook may be facing the biggest fine ever imposed by the US Federal Trade Commission for privacy violations involving the personal informatio­n of its 2.2 billion users.

The FTC is considerin­g hitting Facebook with a penalty that would top its previous record fine of $22.5 million, which it dealt to Google in 2012 for bypassing the privacy controls in Apple’s Safari browser, according to The Washington Post.

The story cited three unidentifi­ed people familiar with the discussion­s.

In an automated response, the FTC said it was unable to comment, citing its closure due to the US government shutdown. Facebook declined to comment.

The potential fine stems from an FTC investigat­ion opened after revelation­s that data mining firm Cambridge Analytica had vacuumed up details about as many as 87 million Facebook users without their permission.

The FTC has been exploring whether that massive breakdown violated a settlement that Facebook reached in 2011 after government regulators had concluded the Menlo Park, California, company had repeatedly broken its privacy promises .

The FTC decree, which runs through 2031, requires Facebook to get its users’ consent to share their personal informatio­n in ways that aren’t allowed by their privacy settings.

Since the Cambridge Analytica erupted 10 months ago, Facebook has vowed to do a better job corralling its users’ data. Neverthele­ss, its controls have remained leaky. Just last month, the company acknowledg­ed a software flaw had exposed the photos of about seven million users to a wider audience than they had intended.

— AP

THE FTC is considerin­g hitting FB with a penalty that would top its previous record fine of $22.5M.

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