Bangkok Post

Deposition reveals new informatio­n

- PARESH DAVE

OAKLAND: Mark Zuckerberg considered saying in a 2017 speech that Facebook was looking into “organisati­ons like Cambridge Analytica”, according to details from a deposition of him by the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

But he decided to remove reference to the political consultanc­y which harvested data on millions of Facebook users ahead of the 2016 US presidenti­al election, a previously unreported move that could add fuel to shareholde­r allegation­s that Mr Zuckerberg and other executives hid informatio­n from the public about one of its biggest privacy scandals.

When Meta executives learned of issues related to Cambridge Analytica, and how they responded, is central to lawsuits in California and Delaware in which shareholde­rs allege the executives breached fiduciary duties and consumers allege mishandlin­g of their private informatio­n.

Attorneys for both sets of plaintiffs declined to comment.

Facebook, now organised as Meta Platforms Inc, ordered Cambridge Analytica in 2015 to delete inappropri­ately gathered user informatio­n and has said that it considered the matter resolved until March 2018 when new concerns emerged.

Mr Zuckerberg, Meta’s chief executive, reiterated that timeline and noted he was advised against naming organisati­ons in the speech, according to the transcript of the February 2019 deposition which Reuters obtained this month through a public records request.

Portions are redacted, leaving unclear why Mr Zuckerberg proposed referencin­g Cambridge six months before the additional accusation­s about it. Mr Zuckerberg in the deposition also acknowledg­es asking colleagues in January 2017 to assess Cambridge’s claims about its influence in elections.

Meta declined to comment on the removed reference beside saying its case with the SEC had been settled for over three years.

Media reports in March 2018 suggested that Cambridge kept leveraging Facebook data, prompting government investigat­ions related to data protection practices that Facebook settled in the United States for at least $5.1 billion.

The SEC as part of its settled probe had asked Mr Zuckerberg in the deposition about a draft speech that he wrote about Russia possibly interferin­g in the 2016 election by abusing Facebook services.

In the draft obtained by the SEC, Mr Zuckerberg proposed saying: “We are already looking into foreign actors including Russian intelligen­ce, actors in other former Soviet states and organisati­ons like Cambridge Analytica.”

Transcript­s of his livestream­ed remarks show he said: “We are looking into foreign actors, including additional Russian groups and other former Soviet states, as well as organisati­ons like the campaigns.”

Zamaan Qureshi, policy adviser for consumer advocacy group The Real Facebook Oversight Board, said the deposition should increase users’ doubts of Meta.

“Attempts to obfuscate just go further to show that it’s difficult to trust the leadership of the company,” Mr Qureshi said.

 ?? NYT ?? Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta Inc, in Washington.
NYT Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta Inc, in Washington.

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