The Philippine Star

FB chief apologizes for data breaches

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SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, on Wednesday publicly addressed for the first time the misuse of data belonging to 50 million users of the social network and described the steps the company would take to safeguard the informatio­n of its more than two billion monthly users.

In an interview with CNN, Zuckerberg said he was really sorry, and pledged to take action against “rogue apps.”

He said that Facebook would contact users whose data had been harvested through a personalit­y quiz app and passed along to the political data firm Cambridge Analytica.

“We have a responsibi­lity to protect your data,” Zuckerberg said Wednesday in a Facebook post, “and if we can’t then we don’t deserve to serve you.”

Zuckerberg, 33, was trying to quell the crisis over the disclosure last weekend that Cambridge Analytica had used data that had been improperly obtained from Facebook as the firm worked on behalf of Donald Trump’s presidenti­al campaign.

“Are there other Cambridge Analyticas out there?” Zuckerberg said later in an interview with The New York Times.

He added, “Were there apps which could have gotten access to more informatio­n and potentiall­y sold it without us knowing or done something that violated people’s trust? We also need to make sure we get that under control.

”Zuckerberg said the company would investigat­e apps like the third-party quiz app that had previously obtained access to “large amounts of informatio­n” from the social network.

He also said the company would restrict third-party developers’ access.

“We also made mistakes, there’s more to do, and we need to step up and do it,” he wrote in his Facebook statement.

The Cambridge Analytica revelation­s added to the questions that have been raised about Facebook’s handling of user data and security.

Those questions have only intensifie­d as the company has faced criticism over the role its platform played in Russian attempts to influence the 2016 presidenti­al election and the way it has been used to spread misinforma­tion on the Internet.

The resulting backlash is Facebook’s worst crisis since it was founded by Zuckerberg and others in 2004.

The informatio­n, photos and other content that users post and their frequent engagement with the platform is crucial to the social network, and to the company’s profitabil­ity.

Questions about user privacy and security threaten the company’s standing at a time when people are already uneasy about whether the use of technology can bring good or ill.

Last Friday, after The New York Times,

The Observer of London and Channel 4 in Britain told Facebook that Cambridge Analytica had not deleted all the data it had obtained, the social network banned the political consulting firm and Alexander Kogan, the Cambridge University researcher who created the personalit­y quiz app that was used to harvest user data.

“This was a breach of trust between Kogan, Cambridge Analytica and Facebook,” Zuckerberg wrote Wednesday. “But it was also a breach of trust between Facebook and the people who share their data with us and expect us to protect it.”

Facebook representa­tives confirmed that Cambridge Analytica representa­tives met with Facebook on Tuesday to discuss lifting the ban.

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