Cape Argus

Users could throw book at Facebook after latest mishap

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FACEBOOK on Tuesday acknowledg­ed another privacy mishap on its platform: this time, some app developers may have wrongly accessed names and profile photos of users in certain groups.

The social networking giant announced the incident in a blog post, estimating roughly 100 “partners” may have accessed this informatio­n – including 11 that did so within the last 60 days.

Otherwise, Facebook declined to offer specifics, including who exactly might have seen the data and how many users had been affected.

The revelation is still likely to result in yet another round of criticism for the tech giant, more than three months after federal regulators slapped it with a $5 billion (R74bn) fine and other punishment­s after allegation­s it mishandled its users’ personal informatio­n.

The settlement, which did not require Facebook to admit guilt, is pending approval in federal court and eventually will require the company to be more vigilant about apps on its platform.

Since the Federal Trade Commission brokered that deal with Facebook, other incidents have come to light.

In September, Facebook said it suspended “tens of thousands” of apps that may have mishandled user data, including some that may have had large followings, court documents at the time revealed.

“Although we’ve seen no evidence of abuse, we will ask them to delete any member data they may have retained and we will conduct audits to confirm that it has been deleted,” said wrote Konstantin­os Papamiltia­dis, the director of platform partnershi­ps at Facebook.

The company did not respond to requests for comment.

The trouble appears to stem from a functional­ity in Facebook’s groups service. Prior to April 2018, administra­tors for groups could authorise apps which could access informatio­n about users in those groups. |

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