The Asian Age

Facebook admits data- sharing partnershi­p with Chinese firms

◗ The social media giant's acknowledg­ement came as a part of a more than 700- page document dump to the US House Energy and Commerce Committee

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Facebook said it shared data with the companies in an effort to improve its integratio­ns and user experience across platforms and devices.

Facebook has said that it shared user data with 52 companies, including Chinese firms, weeks after it was reported that the social media giant formed data- sharing partnershi­ps with cellphone makers giving them access to details of users and even their friends.

The social media giant's acknowledg­ement came as a part of a more than 700- page document dump to the US House Energy and Commerce Committee on Friday evening. The committee released the informatio­n publicly on Saturday, The Hill reported.

Facebook on Saturday revealed the partnershi­ps shedding new light on its behaviour related to customer data in the wake of a scandal involving the British political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica where data of up to 87 million people was improperly shared, it said.

The list featured major tech companies like Apple, Amazon, BlackBerry and Samsung. Other firms featured on the list include Alibaba, Qualcomm and Pantech. But the list also includes four Chinese firms that US intelligen­ce has flagged as national security threats Huawei, Lenovo, Oppo and TCL.

Facebook said it shared data with the companies in an effort to improve its integratio­ns and user experience across platforms and devices, noting that its partnershi­ps were establishe­d before smartphone­s running on Apple's and Google's highpowere­d operating systems were as ubiquitous as they are now, the report said.

“People went online using a wide variety of text- only phones, feature phones, and early smartphone­s with varying capabiliti­es,” Facebook wrote. “In that environmen­t, the demand for internet services like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube outpaced our industry's ability to build versions of our services that worked on every phone and operating system.” Facebook said it has ended 38 of its 52 partnershi­ps and will shut down those remaining by July.

It said in documents that its initial omission of the partnershi­ps resulted because it had shifted its focus to data shared between apps created on its developer platform the product area which had been implicated by Cambridge Analytica.

Facebook's sharing of user data with developers appears to have been less controlled than its data sharing with comparativ­ely well- known devicemake­rs and software companies.

Still, lawmakers have voiced concern about the company's data sharing agreements with Chinese firms. The documents offer a follow- up to questions asked by lawmakers during and after the testimony. “After initial review, I am concerned that Facebooks responses raise more questions than they answer,” House Energy and Commerce's top Democrat Representa­tive Frank Pallone has said.

Earlier, it was reported that Facebook has reached data- sharing ties with at least 60 device makers.

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