Los Angeles Times

Record fine may be just the start

Facebook estimates its FTC penalty could hit $5 billion. It still faces other regulatory issues in U.S., Europe.

- BY HANNAH MURPHY, KADHIM SHUBBER AND KIRAN STACEY

Most companies would balk at having to account for a regulatory fine of as much as $5 billion. But not Facebook Inc.

Its shares rose 10% in after-hours trading Wednesday and closed up 5.9% at $193.26 Thursday, after investors shrugged off news of the anticipate­d record penalty from the Federal Trade Commission and focused instead on the social network’s strong revenue and earnings performanc­e, excluding the legal charge.

The FTC launched a privacy investigat­ion into Facebook in March 2018 after the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which the data of 87 million users were improperly accessed by a third party.

Facebook estimated the potential fine at $3 billion to $5 billion and booked a $3billion accounting charge in its first-quarter results, even though negotiatio­ns with the FTC are ongoing. The disclosure served to give clarity to investors, who were aware that a penalty was coming.

But some experts warn that it is too soon to write off Facebook’s regulatory issues. The social network is facing numerous investigat­ions in the U.S. and Europe, while lawmakers in Australia and Britain have put forward tough legislativ­e proposals targeting social media platforms.

On Thursday, Canada became the latest country to accuse the company of having broken its data protection laws after an investigat­ion sparked by the Cambridge Analytica affair.

Separately, the Irish data commission, which oversees compliance with the European Union’s new data protection regulation­s, said it had launched a new investigat­ion into the company for exposing hundreds of millions of users’ passwords, the commission’s 11th on

going inquiry into Facebook apps to date.

“This is definitely not the end for Facebook’s problems, particular­ly outside the U.S.,” said Sam McGowan, research analyst at Washington analysis group Beacon Policy Advisors.

“Over the next couple of years, most of the regulatory problems it faces will be in the EU, but it could still face significan­t antitrust problems in the U.S., depending on the outcome of the 2020 election,” he said.

Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Sen. Elizabeth Warren has said she would break up Facebook if elected. On Wednesday, she criticized the potential $3-billion to $5billion penalty as a “slap on the wrist.”

“Facebook is a repeat offender, [and] fines like this won’t stop them from breaking the law [and] violating our privacy again,” she said in a tweet. “It’s going to take big, structural change.”

Facebook’s eventual settlement with the FTC could go beyond the fine to introduce restrictio­ns on the company’s practices that may disrupt its business model and hurt revenues.

Jim Kohm, who heads the FTC’s enforcemen­t division, hinted at such a move last month, when he told Politico, “In addressing alleged [consent decree] violations, the Commission has the option to seek additional conduct remedies as well as monetary penalties.”

Ashkan Soltani, former chief technologi­st at the FTC, said potential further restrictio­ns could affect the collection of personal data without a user’s knowledge and the sharing or exchange of data with third parties such as app developers.

“To the degree that regulators are concerned with the use of data for micro-targeting and manipulati­on, such as in the case of Cambridge Analytica, you could imagine injunction­s on the ability to micro-target individual users ... via custom audiences,” Soltani said.

The prospect is a daunting one for advertiser­s, said Debra Aho Williamson, principal analyst at research group EMarketer. “If advertiser­s were not able to use that precision targeting to the same extent that they have, it could make Facebook a less attractive advertisin­g platform.”

A penalty in the proposed range would mark the largest civil fine ever imposed by the FTC, far surpassing the $22.5 million paid by Google in 2012 for misreprese­nting privacy assurances to some users.

It would also be a more significan­t penalty than could be imposed under the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, which allows for fines of up to 4% of global revenue. Based on Facebook’s 2018 revenue, the maximum potential fine would be $2.2 billion.

But it was not just Warren who noted that $5 billion represents just under a quarter of Facebook’s 2018 net income, and a ninth of its $41.1 billion in cash and marketable securities at the end of the year.

Some Democrats have called for Facebook’s executives, including Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, to be held personally accountabl­e as part of the settlement. Others warned that if the FTC is seen to be weak, it increases the incentive for Congress to craft legislatio­n regulating the tech giants.

Rep. David Cicilline, the Democratic chair of the House antitrust subcommitt­ee, in a tweet on Wednesday reiterated his warnings that a fine in the “low billions of dollars would amount to a slap on the wrist for Facebook.”

“If the FTC won’t act, Congress has to,” he said.

 ?? NIALL CARSON Abaca Press ?? FACEBOOK could face an FTC fine of up to $5 billion, but some Democrats want CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other executives to be held personally accountabl­e.
NIALL CARSON Abaca Press FACEBOOK could face an FTC fine of up to $5 billion, but some Democrats want CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other executives to be held personally accountabl­e.

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