The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

IBM CEO criticizes use of data by Silicon Valley

- By Natalia Drozdiak and Lyubov Pronina Bloomberg News

Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp. Chief Executive Officer Ginni Rometty joined a growing chorus of tech executives lambasting web platforms such as Google and Facebook over their collection of user data and urged government­s to target regulation at those companies.

Without naming company names, Rometty pointed to the “irresponsi­ble handling of personal data by a few dominant consumer-facing platform companies” as the cause of a “trust crisis” between users and tech companies, according to an advanced copy of her remarks.

Rometty’s comments, given at a Brussels event with top EU officials Monday, echoed recent statements by Apple CEO Tim Cook, who in October slammed Silicon Valley rivals over their use of data, equating their services to “surveillan­ce.”

The IBM chief continued her twoday visit to Brussels on Tuesday, meeting with the European Commission Vice-President in charge of jobs and growth, Jyrki Katainen. On Monday, she met with the EU’s privacy chief, Vera Jourova, and EU Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom and, at the event, appeared on a panel with Andrus Ansip, the commission’s vice president for digital affairs.

The comments by the tech executives come as both Facebook and Alphabet’s Google are under intense scrutiny by lawmakers in the U.S. and Europe over privacy breaches and election interferen­ce.

IBM, meanwhile, has seen revenue decline since Rometty took the CEO role in 2012, largely due to falling sales in existing hardware, software and services offerings. She has since been trying to steer IBM toward more modern businesses, such as the cloud, artificial intelligen­ce and security software.

Seeking to separate IBM — which operates primarily at a business-to-business level — from the troubled tech companies, Rometty said government­s should target regulation at consumer-facing web platforms, like social media firms and search engines.

“The power dynamic is very different in the business-to-business markets,” Rometty said. “Tackling the real problem means using a regulatory scalpel, not a sledgehamm­er, to avoid collateral damage that would hurt the wider, productive and more responsibl­e parts of the digital economy.”

In particular, Rometty pushed for more measures around the transparen­cy of artificial intelligen­ce as well as rules around platform liability.

Tech firms like Google and Facebook have typically pushed back on any plans to give platforms more legal liability over what people post or upload on their sites, arguing it could lead to restrictio­ns on free speech if companies have to monitor what users upload.

“Dominant online platforms have more power to shape public opinion than newspapers or the television ever had, yet they face very little regulation or liability,” Rometty said. “On liability, new thinking is needed.”

Rometty called on the European Union to change laws that have previously handed web platforms immunity from what appears on their sites. The EU’s so-called e-commerce directive from 2000 was designed to boost innovation among young firms. The bloc has since introduced targeted measures giving tech companies liability over specific content, like ordering them to remove terror propaganda within one hour, but it’s yet to formally change the law.

 ?? ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG 2014 ?? IBM chief Ginni Rometty’s remarks on “irresponsi­ble”handling of personal data echoed statements by Apple CEO Tim Cook in October that called it “surveillan­ce.”
ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG 2014 IBM chief Ginni Rometty’s remarks on “irresponsi­ble”handling of personal data echoed statements by Apple CEO Tim Cook in October that called it “surveillan­ce.”

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