USA TODAY US Edition

Facebook still automatica­lly gets data from some apps

- Mike Snider

Some Android apps, including Yelp, continue to send data to Facebook even if the device owner doesn’t have a Facebook account, according to a privacy watchdog group.

U.K.-based non-profit Privacy Internatio­nal analyzed the data of 34 popular Android apps with 10 million to 500 million installs. In a December report, it found that 23 of the apps automatica­lly sent data to Facebook. Some, but not all, of the apps have since been corrected, not all have, Privacy Internatio­nal said in an updated report.

Android versions of Yelp, job search app Indeed, language app Duolingo, the King James Bible app and Muslim prayer apps Qibla Connect and Muslim Pro continue to send data to Facebook regardless of whether users have an account on the social network or are logged out, according to the report.

Some versions of the apps for Apple iOS devices “exhibit similar behavior,” the group said.

The action is “hugely problemati­c” in that it not only invades users’ privacy but also puts competing apps at a disadvanta­ge, Privacy Internatio­nal’s report says. “Since so many apps still send this kind of data to Facebook, this could give the company an extraordin­ary insight into a large share of the app ecosystem.”

The group said it had brought the issue to the attention of European Union regulators and contacted the various app makers.

“Duolingo thanks Privacy Internatio­nal for their important work raising awareness of this issue,” said its statement to Privacy Internatio­nal, shared with USA TODAY. “As part of our ongoing commitment to privacy, we are removing the ... component from both the Android and iOS apps in the next version releases.”

Facebook and the other companies did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

In December, Privacy Internatio­nal said it tested many popular apps, including Spotify, and found they automatica­lly sent data to Facebook. In a retest, PI found Spotify and two-thirds of the apps had “updated their apps so that they no longer contact Facebook when you open the app,” its report said.

The update comes as Facebook said Wednesday it was moving forward on plans to combine its Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp apps to make messaging more “privacy-focused.”

Facebook has faced numerous privacy-invasion incidents over the past few years, including the Cambridge Analytica scandal in which as many as 87 million had their data improperly shared. “Many people don’t think Facebook can or would even want to build this kind of privacy-focused platform – because frankly we don’t currently have a strong reputation for building privacy protective services,” CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in the blog post.

Heightened regulator scrutiny could hamper Facebook’s strategy, said Scott Devitt, an analyst with investment bank Stifel. “We believe Facebook sits in the precarious position of trying to protect the golden goose of engagement-and-datadriven advertisin­g revenue while pivoting to a new privacy-centric business model to create the perception of addressing flaws of the past,” he said. “Facebook will make this attempt while integratin­g the very assets that could be targets for separation by global regulators.”

 ?? TIMUR EMEK/AP ?? Facebook has faced lawsuits alleging invasion of privacy.
TIMUR EMEK/AP Facebook has faced lawsuits alleging invasion of privacy.

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