Houston Chronicle

D.C. leads in privacy suit against Facebook

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WASHINGTON — The attorney general for the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit on Wednesday against Facebook for allowing Cambridge Analytica, a political consultanc­y, to gain access to the names, “likes” and other personal data of about tens of millions of the social site’s users without their permission.

The lawsuit filed by Karl Racine, confirmed Wednesday by two people familiar with the matter but not authorized to speak on record, marks the first major effort by regulators in the United States to penalize the tech giant for its entangleme­nt with the firm. It could presage even tougher fines and other punishment­s still to come for Facebook as additional state and federal investigat­ions continue.

Facebook did not immediatel­y respond to requests.

The lawsuit comes as Facebook continues to face criticism around the world for mismanagin­g its users’ personal informatio­n. On Friday, for example, the company admitted that some users’ photos may have been improperly accessed by third-party apps.

On Tuesday, new details emerged about Facebook’s extensive data-sharing arrangemen­ts with corporate partners including Amazon and Spotify. The report from The New York Times quickly triggered another round of calls from Capitol Hill for the tech giant to be penalized.

To that end, a person familiar with the new District of Columbia lawsuit said it is likely to be amended in the future to include more recent allegation­s of improper data collection and use. This person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss matters not yet public, said several states also are pursuing investigat­ions into Facebook.

Facebook’s troubles with Cambridge Analytica came to light in March, after a whistleblo­wer, Christophe­r Wylie, revealed that the political firm sought to create “psychograp­hic” profiles about social-media users and target them with messages that preyed on their hopes and fears. Before it shut down, Cambridge Analytica for a time had been managed by Steve Bannon, who was the company’s vice president and later served as a top advisor to President Trump.

Cambridge Analytica in 2014 used data collected by a quiz app, which gathered informatio­n on those who used it as well as their friends, which numbered in the hundreds for many users. That data included names, home towns, religious and educationa­l background­s, friend lists and other data, researcher­s said at the time. In total, the effort allowed Cambridge Analytica to harvest insights on more than 87 million users around the world, including 71 million Americans, Facebook previously revealed.

The revelation unleashed unpreceden­ted global scrutiny of Facebook’s privacy practices and a wave of investigat­ions, including the United States, where Facebook now faces the prospect of serious fines

The federal investigat­ion involving the Security and Exchange Commission, the Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department has been underway for months, focusing in part on whether Facebook’s representa­tions to investors regarding the Cambridge Analytica scandal have been full and accurate. The FTC is also probing whether Facebook’s relationsh­ip with Cambridge Analytica — and its handling of users’ data — violated a 2011 agreement brokered by the agency that required the tech giant to improve its privacy practices.

Regulators in the United Kingdom announced earlier this year they would penalize Facebook — a $625,000 fine — but the company has contested it in court. Previously, Facebook declined to make its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, available to testify in front of lawmakers from the UK and eight other countries that remain concerned about the Cambridge Analytica controvers­y.

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