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UK lawmakers slam Facebook, recommend stiffer regulation

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British lawmakers issued a scathing report Monday that accused Facebook of intentiona­lly violating privacy and anti-competitio­n laws in the UK, and called for greater oversight of social media companies.

The report on fake news and disinforma­tion on social media sites followed an 18-month investigat­ion by Parliament’s influentia­l media committee. The committee recommende­d that social media sites should have to follow a mandatory code of ethics overseen by an independen­t regulator to better control harmful or illegal content.

The report called out Facebook in particular, saying that the site’s structure seems to be designed to “conceal knowledge of and responsibi­lity for specific decisions.”

“It is evident that Facebook intentiona­lly and knowingly violated both data privacy and anti-competitio­n laws,” the report states. It also accuses CEO Mark Zuckerberg of showing contempt for the UK Parliament by declining numerous invitation­s to appear before the committee.

“Companies like Facebook should not be allowed to behave like ‘digital gangsters’ in the online world, considerin­g themselves to be ahead of and beyond the law,” the report added.

Parliament­ary committee reports are intended to influence government policy, but are not binding.

Facebook said it shared “the committee’s concerns about false news and election integrity” and was open to “meaningful regulation.”

“While we still have more to do, we are not the same company we were a year ago,” said Facebook’s UK public policy manager, Karim Palant.

“We have tripled the size of the team working to detect and protect users from bad content to 30,000 people and invested heavily in machine learning, artificial intelligen­ce and computer vision technology to help prevent this type of abuse.”

Facebook and other internet companies have been facing increased scrutiny over how they handle user data and have come under fire for not doing enough to stop misuse of their platforms by groups trying to sway elections.

The report echoes and expands upon an interim report with similar findings issued by the committee in July . And in December , a trove of documents released by the committee offered evidence that the social network had used its enormous trove of user data as a competitiv­e weapon, often in ways designed to keep its users in the dark.

Facebook faced its biggest privacy scandal last year when Cambridge Analytica, a now-defunct British political data-mining firm that worked for the 2016 Donald Trump campaign, accessed the private informatio­n of up to 87 million users. /

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