Los Angeles Times

RECORD FINE IN PRIVACY SCANDAL

Facebook will pay about $5 billion in Cambridge Analytica data probe, but the FTC isn’t finished yet.

- By David McLaughlin and Daniel Stoller

The Federal Trade Commission approved a record privacy settlement against Facebook Inc. requiring the social media company to pay about $5 billion to resolve an investigat­ion stemming from the Cambridge Analytica data scandal.

The FTC’s settlement was approved by a vote of 3 to 2, according to two people familiar with the matter. It caps a probe that opened in March 2018 after news that Cambridge Analytica, a consulting firm hired by President Trump’s campaign, improperly obtained user data from a researcher who had created a personalit­y quiz app on the social network.

The FTC’s settlement, the largest privacy fine in the agency’s history, marks the most significan­t action yet against Facebook over a series of mishaps that have compromise­d users’ data and sent the company reeling from one crisis to another. The mishandlin­g of data has spurred efforts in Washington to pass legislatio­n to better protect the personal informatio­n collected by the nation’s technology firms before a window closes ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al campaign.

As the probe dragged on, FTC Chairman Joe Simons came under increasing pressure from lawmakers and privacy advocates to craft a tough settlement that would protect users’ privacy. The deal is likely to leave many critics of the company unsatisfie­d, given that the agency’s two Democratic commission­ers voted against it.

Facebook declined to comment.

While the FTC settlement removes a major burden weighing on the company, Facebook is still grappling with regulatory scrutiny on a host of other fronts. European Union officials are pursuing multiple data-protection investigat­ions, while U.K. antitrust authoritie­s are examining the company’s dominance in digital advertisin­g.

In the U.S., the Justice

Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission opened investigat­ions related to the Cambridge Analytica scandal. Facebook declined to comment on the status of those probes.

Separately, the attorney general for Washington, D.C., has sued the company, claiming it failed to safeguard users’ data. Other attorneys general are also investigat­ing.

The FTC is poised to continue scrutiny of Facebook. As part of a broad agreement with the Justice Department dividing oversight of four of the biggest tech companies, the agency will take responsibi­lity for a potential antitrust investigat­ion into Facebook. One area of focus is likely to be the company’s acquisitio­ns of Instagram and WhatsApp.

The settlement ranks among the highest at the FTC, which reached a $10billion settlement with Volkswagen in 2016 for deceptive advertisin­g in the emission-cheating scandal involving diesel models. The agency’s previous record fine in a privacy action came in 2012, when Alphabet Inc.’s Google paid $22.5 million to settle claims it misreprese­nted its privacy assurances to Apple Inc.’s Safari users.

The FTC can impose fines only on companies that have previously agreed to settle claims with the agency under consent decrees but not on first-time offenders. The agency has lobbied for greater authority to penalize wrongdoers in privacy cases, though some have questioned whether it was up to the job of taking advantage of the limited power it has now.

The commission’s 2011 consent decree with Facebook addressed a litany of deceptive practices by the social media company. Facebook, for example, allowed profile informatio­n — photos, education, place of employment — that a user chose to restrict to “Only Friends” or “Friends of Friends” to be accessible to apps the person’s friends used. Facebook also promised users it wouldn’t share personal informatio­n about them with advertiser­s, when in fact the company identified to advertiser­s the users who clicked on their ads or to whom ads were targeted.

Under the 2011 settlement, Facebook was required to implement a privacy program, obtain express consent from users before making changes that override privacy preference­s and undergo regular privacy audits.

The Cambridge Analytica incident stems from a personalit­y quiz app offered to Facebook users by a Cambridge University researcher. About 270,000 people downloaded the app, allowing the researcher to access data about those individual­s and their friends. The informatio­n was subsequent­ly sold to Cambridge Analytica.

Facebook has said the researcher­s obtained users’ data with their consent and sold the informatio­n to Cambridge Analytica in violation of Facebook’s policies.

 ?? Richard Drew Associated Press ?? FACEBOOK CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen testifying before Congress about users’ data in April 2018.
Richard Drew Associated Press FACEBOOK CEO Mark Zuckerberg is seen testifying before Congress about users’ data in April 2018.

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