Jamaica Gleaner

Global lawmakers grill Facebook exec, Zuckerberg a no-show

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ACOHORT of internatio­nal lawmakers is trying to turn up the pressure on Facebook, grilling one of its executives and making a show of founder Mark Zuckerberg’s refusal to explain to them why his company failed to protect users’ data privacy.

The rare “internatio­nal grand committee” of lawmakers from nine countries gathered in London to get answers about Facebook’s handling of personal data and made a point of leaving an empty seat with Zuckerberg’s name tag.

Richard Allan, the company’s vice-president for policy solutions, said he volunteere­d to attend because Zuckerberg had already appeared before other committees this year, including in Washington and, briefly, Brussels.

Lawmakers from Canada, Ireland, Brazil, Argentina, Singapore, Belgium, France, and Latvia joined their British counterpar­ts at the parliament­ary select committee hearing – the first such cross-border event in London since 1933. They want to scrutinise Facebook over its handling of data privacy, most notably involving consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica’s improper use of informatio­n from more than 87 million Facebook accounts to manipulate elections.

British select committees are used to investigat­e major issues and have the powerful – from CEOs to government officials – explain their decisions in a public forum. They don’t have the power to make laws, but the government takes their recommenda­tions into account when formulatin­g new policies.

Allan appeared after the committee’s chairman, Damian Collins, took the unusual move of seizing a trove of confidenti­al internal Facebook documents from a visiting US tech executive. The committee wanted the files, which have been sealed by a California judge, in the hope they would shed light on Facebook’s privacy policies.

HACKING ALERT

Collins, who has not yet made the documents public, asked Allan about one item he said was of considerab­le public interest that suggests Facebook was alerted to possible Russian hacking years before it became a major issue. He said the document indicates that a Facebook engineer notified his superiors in October 2014 that “entities with Russian IP addresses” were pulling more than three billion data points a day from Facebook.

Allan said that informatio­n was “at best partial and at worst potentiall­y misleading”.

Facebook said in a statement that “the engineers who had flagged these initial concerns subsequent­ly looked into this further and found no evidence of specific Russian activity”.

The committee obtained the files from Theodore Kramer, CEO of app maker Six4Three, after they discovered he was in London, threatenin­g him with prison if he refused. Kramer’s company acquired the files as part of a legal-discovery process in a lawsuit against Facebook.

Allan apologised frequently but revealed little new about Facebook and its operations. He acknowledg­ed that the company has not been without blame in how it handled various scandals.

“I’m not going to disagree with you that we’ve damaged public trust with some of the actions we’ve taken,” he said.

Allan was responding to Canadian lawmaker Charlie Angus, who said the socialmedi­a giant has “lost the trust of the internatio­nal community to self-police”, and that government­s have to start looking at ways to hold the company accountabl­e. Facebook accepts that a regulatory framework is needed, Allan said.

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 ?? AP ?? An activist wearing a Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg mask stands outside Portcullis House in Westminste­r as an internatio­nal committee of parliament­arians meets for a hearing on the impact of disinforma­tion on democracy in London, yesterday.
AP An activist wearing a Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg mask stands outside Portcullis House in Westminste­r as an internatio­nal committee of parliament­arians meets for a hearing on the impact of disinforma­tion on democracy in London, yesterday.

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