Albany Times Union

Law to protect data would be a hit to Big Tech profits

Companies would be required to get users’ OK to disperse info

- By Marcy Gordon

Momentum is gaining in Washington for a privacy law that could sharply rein in the ability of the largest technology companies to collect and distribute people’s personal data.

A national law, the first of its kind in the U.S., could allow people to see or prohibit the use of their data. Companies would need permission to release such informatio­n. If it takes effect, a law would also likely shrink Big Tech’s profits from its lucrative business of making personal data available to advertiser­s so they can pinpoint specific consumers to target.

Behind the drive for a law is rising concern over private data being compromise­d or distribute­d by Facebook, Google and other tech giants that have earned riches from collecting and distributi­ng consumer informatio­n. The industry traditiona­lly has been lightly regulated and has resisted closer oversight as a threat to its culture of freewheeli­ng innovation.

Support for a privacy law is part of a broader effort by regulators and lawmakers to lessen the domination of companies like Facebook, Google and Amazon. Some, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, called for the tech giants to be split up.

The Trump White House has said in the past that it could endorse a broad data privacy law.

The big tech companies have been nervously eyeing a tough privacy law taking effect next year in California. That measure will allow California­ns to see the personal data being collected on them and where it’s being distribute­d and to forbid the sale of it. With some exceptions, consumers could also request that their personal informatio­n be deleted entirely.

Whatever federal privacy law eventually emerges is expected to be less stringent than the California measure and to supersede it. As a result, the tech industry is trying to help shape any national restrictio­ns.

“This is the first time ever that the industry wants legislatio­n,” said Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, a privacy advocacy group. “The industry is terrified.”

On Tuesday, a House committee will press Google and Facebook executives about another urgent concern involving Big Tech: Whether they’re doing enough to curb the spread of hate crimes and white nationalis­m through online platforms. The Judiciary Committee hearing follows a series of violent incidents fueled in part by online communicat­ion.

Facebook, used by 2-billionplu­s people including more than 200 million in the U.S., has been a particular lightning rod for industry critics. Having had its reputation tarnished over data privacy lapses, a tide of hate speech and a spread of disinforma­tion that allowed Russian agents to target propaganda campaigns, Facebook appears ready to embrace a national privacy law. Facebook’s founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, published a column last month in the Washington Post calling for tighter regulation­s to protect consumer data, control harmful content and ensure election integrity and data portabilit­y.

“The internet,” Zuckerberg wrote, “needs new rules.”

Amazon says it has built its business on protecting people’s informatio­n, “and we have been working with policymake­rs on how best to do that.”

“There is real momentum to develop baseline rules of the road for data protection,” Google’s chief privacy officer, Keith Enright, has said in a policy paper. “Google welcomes this and supports comprehens­ive, baseline privacy regulation.”

A sweeping “privacy shield” law in the European Union, covering how tech companies handle personal data in the 28-country bloc, should be a model, Zuckerberg wrote. EU regulators recently fined Google $1.7 billion for freezing out rivals in the online ad business — their third penalty against the search giant in two years. The EU watchdogs also ordered Apple and Amazon to pay back taxes and fined Facebook for providing misleading informatio­n in its acquisitio­n of Whatsapp.

On Monday, Britain unveiled plans to vastly increase government oversight of social media companies, with a watchdog that could fine executives or even ban companies that fail to block such content as terrorist propaganda and images of child abuse.

The entire debate cuts to the heart of Big Tech’s hugely profitable commerce in online users’ personal data. The companies gather vast data on what users read and like and leverage it to help advertiser­s target their messages to the individual­s they want to reach. Facebook drew 99 percent of its revenue from advertisin­g last year. For Google’s parent Alphabet, it was 85 percent, according to Scott Kessler of the research firm CFRA.

Amazon, too, doesn’t just sell products online; it provides ad space, too. The company doesn’t say how much but has said that the “other” revenue in its financial reports is mainly from ads. Its “other” revenue topped $10 billion last year, more than double what it was in 2017.

The tech giants’ problemati­c relationsh­ip with advertiser­s was spotlighte­d by action regulators took last month. The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t filed civil charges against Facebook, accusing it of allowing landlords and real estate brokers to exclude certain racial or ethnic groups from seeing ads for houses and apartments. Facebook could face penalties.

The company has separately agreed to overhaul its ad targeting system and end some of the practices noted by HUD to prevent discrimina­tion in housing listings as well as credit and employment ads. That move was part of a settlement with the American Civil Liberties Union and other activists.

 ?? Alex Brandon / Associated Press archive ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, seen here testifying before a joint hearing of the Commerce and Judiciary Committees on Capitol Hill in 2018, wrote a column last month in the Washington Post calling for tighter regulation­s to protect consumer data, control harmful content and ensure election integrity and data portabilit­y.
Alex Brandon / Associated Press archive Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, seen here testifying before a joint hearing of the Commerce and Judiciary Committees on Capitol Hill in 2018, wrote a column last month in the Washington Post calling for tighter regulation­s to protect consumer data, control harmful content and ensure election integrity and data portabilit­y.

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