The Asian Age

Indonesia demands more answers from FB on data misuse

◗ Indonesia give Facebook a week to provide informatio­n on how personal data of its citizens is being misused

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Jakarta: Indonesia has given Facebook a week to provide more informatio­n on how personal data of about one million of its citizens was misused and on the steps the company is taking to prevent such breaches, the country’s communicat­ions ministry said.

More than million Indonesian­s use Facebook and authoritie­s in the Southeast Asian country have been pressing the firm to explain how personal data was harvested by political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica via a personalit­y quiz.

A Facebook official apologized to Indonesian members of parliament this week at a public hearing, where the company said that 1,096,666 people in the country may have had their data shared, or 1.26 percent of the global total.

In a statement released on Thursday evening, the ministry said it had sent a letter to Facebook Ireland Ltd, the company’s main internatio­nal business unit, in response to an April 10 letter from the company’s head of data protection.

The ministry had asked for more details and documents on any misuse of data, including whether data had been shared with other third parties such as CubeYou and Aggregate IQ.

Facebook has said it was suspending Canadian political consultanc­y AggregateI­Q from its platform after reports the firm may have improperly had access to the personal data of Facebook users.

According to CNBC, Facebook was also suspending 115 data analytics firm CubeYou to investigat­e how it was collecting informatio­n through quizzes.

The Indonesian communicat­ions ministry was also seeking confirmati­on on technical measures to limit data access in Facebook and more informatio­n on an audit the social media company was doing on sharing.

The statement said Facebook would have to meet the requests within seven days of the letter that was sent on Thursday.

Facebook did not immediatel­y provide comment on Friday.

Earlier this week, Facebook said in a statement that it was “committed to improving the way we protect people’s informatio­n, and to providing a safe and secure experience for the more than 115 million Indonesian­s on Facebook”.

It said it was “working hard to tackle past abuse, prevent future abuse and give people more prominent privacy controls” and was “committed to providing regular updates to Indonesian­s, their representa­tives, the authoritie­s and the media.” The company is also facing investigat­ions in other countries, such as the Philippine­s, the United States and Australia, in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica data breach scandal.

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