Khaleej Times

FB shared data with four Chinese firms

- Ben Brody and Sarah Frier Facebook sent chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg to Washington in April to undergo 10 hours of congressio­nal questionin­g after a March revelation about an app developer that passed informatio­n on up to 87 million Facebook us

washington — Facebook Inc said it had data-sharing partnershi­ps with four Chinese consumer-device makers, including Huawei Technologi­es Co, escalating concerns that the social network has consistent­ly failed to tell users how their personal informatio­n flows beyond Facebook.

The disclosure came after Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, said on Tuesday that he saw “a serious danger” that Facebook shared user informatio­n with Chinese device makers.

Facebook said it was careful about the partnershi­ps, which were designed to help smartphone makers build custom versions of Facebook’s app. Still, the confirmati­on is likely to heighten scrutiny of the company’s privacy practices if the deals weren’t explicitly disclosed to users.

“Facebook’s integratio­ns with Huawei, Lenovo, OPPO and TCL were controlled from the get go — and we approved the Facebook experience­s these companies built,” Francisco Varela, the company’s vice president of mobile partnershi­ps, said in a statement. “Given the interest from Congress, we wanted to make clear that all the informatio­n from these integratio­ns with Huawei was stored on the device, not on Huawei’s servers.”

Huawei said in an emailed statement that it never collected or stored Facebook user data but had worked in the past with the social media company to make services “more convenient for users.”

Facebook has been responding to a global backlash about how it handles users’ data, from lawmakers and privacy advocates in the US and Europe. The company sent chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg to Washington in April to undergo 10 hours of congressio­nal questionin­g after a March revelation about an app developer that passed informatio­n on up to 87 million Facebook users to a political consultanc­y, Cambridge Analytica. Zuckerberg told Congress that the company’s policies no longer allow such lapses.

Then, the New York Times reported on Sunday that the company had for years allowed deals with about 60 phone and device manufactur­ers, giving them access to vast amounts of informatio­n on users and their friends. It’s not clear yet whether any of the partners abused the data or transferre­d it to unauthoris­ed parties. Still, the disclosure adds fuel to public distrust of the social network, whose main app has more than 2 billion users worldwide, and which owns other popular programs like Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger. If users weren’t aware of device makers’

Facebook’s integratio­ns with Huawei, Lenovo, OPPO and TCL were controlled

Francisco Varela, Vice-president of mobile partnershi­ps, Facebook

access, the deals could violate a 2011 US Federal Trade Commission consent decree.

Facebook shares slipped less than 1 per cent in early trading on Wednesday in New York.

The confirmati­on that Chinese device makers, especially Huawei, were among the manufactur­ers with access to user data raised even more questions among US lawmakers about how the informatio­n was stored and used.

“The news that Facebook provided privileged access to Facebook’s API to Chinese device makers like Huawei and TCL raises legitimate concerns,” Senator Warner of Virginia said after Facebook’s disclosure late on Tuesday. “I look forward to learning more about how Facebook ensured that informatio­n about their users was not sent to Chinese servers.”

Huawei, China’s largest maker of telecommun­ications equipment, was founded in 1988 by former Chinese army officer Ren Zhengfei. Congress has barred the Pentagon from buying Huawei’s gear, along with ZTE Corp., citing the companies’ connection­s to the Chinese government and the potential for intellectu­al-property theft and spying.

In April, the US Federal Communicat­ions Commission voted 5-0 to ban federal funds from being spent with the companies, citing concerns their products can provide “hidden back doors” into US computer networks that could inject viruses, spy on businesses and steal Americans’ private data, said FCC Chairman Ajit Pai.

“Concerns about Huawei aren’t new — they were widely publicised beginning in 2012, when the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligen­ce released a wellread report on the close relationsh­ips between the Chinese Communist Party and equipment makers like Huawei,” Warner said in the statement late Tuesday.

Some US lawmakers, many of whom were already critical of Facebook’s response to earlier inquiries into the Cambridge Analytica data scandal, have been skeptical of Facebook’s explanatio­ns of its latest purported data lapse, and demanded more accountabi­lity.

Senators John Thune and Bill Nelson, the Republican chairman and top Democrat, respective­ly, on the Senate Commerce Committee asked CEO Zuckerberg in a Tuesday letter for a full list of device makers with which Facebook had agreements. They also asked how the company verifies compliance with the agreements and whether Zuckerberg would like to amend his April testimony to the committee in which he said that users have “complete control” over how their data is shared.

Facebook had already said in April that it was dismantlin­g the device-maker data partnershi­ps, following a review of informatio­nsharing agreements sparked by the Cambridge Analytica crisis. After the New York Times disclosed the names of device makers who had deals, the company said it was winding down the Huawei agreement this week.

Still, Facebook defended the choice on Tuesday. “Huawei is the third-largest mobile manufactur­er globally and its devices are used by people all around the world, including in the United States,” Varela said. — Bloomberg

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