The Jerusalem Post

US lawmakers press Facebook over Chinese data sharing

- • By DAVID SHEPARDSON

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Two key US lawmakers on Wednesday rebuked Facebook for not being more transparen­t over its data-sharing practices, after the social media company said it had collaborat­ed with at least four Chinese companies, including a smartphone maker that has raised US security concerns.

The top Republican and Democrat on the US House Energy and Commerce Committee said Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg should have disclosed those data-sharing partnershi­ps when he testified before Congress in April.

“Clearly, the company’s partnershi­ps with Chinese technology companies and others should have been disclosed before Congress and the American people,” the panel’s Republican chairman, Greg Walden, and ranking Democrat, Frank Pallone, said in a statement.

“We strongly encourage full transparen­cy from Facebook and the entire tech community,” they wrote.

On Tuesday, Facebook said Huawei, computer maker Lenovo Group, and smartphone makers OPPO and TCL Corp. were among about 60 companies worldwide that received access to some user data after they signed contracts to recreate Facebook-like experience­s for their users.

Huawei, the world’s third-largest smartphone maker, has come under scrutiny from US intelligen­ce agencies which argue that Chinese telecommun­ications companies provide an opportunit­y for foreign espionage and threaten critical US infrastruc­ture, something the Chinese have consistent­ly denied.

Facebook on Tuesday said it would end the Huawei pact this week and was ending the other three Chinese partnershi­ps as well, adding that more than half of the partnershi­ps had already wound down.

A Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoma­n had no comment on the companies’ agreements.

Members of Congress have expressed concern after The New York Times reported that the data of users’ friends could have been accessed without their explicit consent. Facebook denied that and said the data access was to allow its users to access account features on mobile devices.

In a separate letter on Tuesday, the Senate Commerce Committee also pressed Facebook for more informatio­n, while the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee’s top Democrat urged Facebook to release further details.

Facebook said it would address the Commerce Committee’s questions.

Congressio­nal staff members have said the company still has not answered hundreds of questions from lawmakers after Zuckerberg’s testimony before two committees in April.

Other companies that have used Facebook data sharing include Amazon, Apple, HTC Corp., Microsoft and Samsung Electronic­s, Facebook has said.

Several countries are scrutinizi­ng the social network, after it failed to protect the data of some 87 million users that was shared with now-defunct political data firm Cambridge Analytica.

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