Zuckerberg: refused to pledge new privacy protections to users outside of Europe - The rest will only benefit "in spirit"
MARK ZUCKERBERG HINTS MOST FACEBOOK USERS WON'T BENEFIT
FROM NEW PRIVACY RULES
The Facebook founder refused to pledge new privacy
protections to users outside of Europe
By ANTHONY CUTHBERTSON April 4, 2018
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said that new data
privacy laws will only apply “in spirit” to more than three quarters of the
company’s users.
Europe’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) will
force the social network to comply with strict rules about the privacy of its
European users. But Mr Zuckerberg failed to commit to rolling out the
protections globally.
“We’re still nailing down details on this, but it should
directionally be, in spirit, the whole thing,” Mr Zuckerberg said on Tuesday.
With only 17 per cent of its 2.2 billion users residing
within Europe, the vast majority of Facebook's users will not benefit from the
new rules.
Facebook has faced pressure in recent weeks to better
protect its users’ data following revelations that the data analytics firm
Cambridge Analytica harvested personal information from more than 50 million
Facebook accounts in the build up to the 2016 US elections.
On Monday, New York City Comptroller Scott Stringer
called for Mr Zuckerberg to resign from his role as chairman of Facebook,
adding that data privacy issues represented “a risk to our democracy.”
The new data protection law – set to come into effect on
May 25 – will give people more control over how companies store and use their
personal data.
Privacy advocates argue that Facebook is doing only what
is legally required of them and needs to do more to address issues relating to
the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
“It would be missing some of the larger picture to
interpret this as a completely voluntary, privacy-protective measure taken
wholly in response to Cambridge Analytica,” Jamie Williams and Gennie Gebhart
from the Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a blogpost on Tuesday.
“If Facebook wants to demonstrate that it cares beyond
legal compliance, it needs to make far broader changes.”
Data is central to Facebook's advertising business, and
it has not yet sketched out a satisfying plan for how it plans to comply, said
Pivotal Research analyst Brian Wieser.
"I haven't heard any solutions from Facebook to get
ahead of the problem yet," Wieser said.
Failure to comply with the law carries a maximum penalty
of up to 4 percent of annual revenue.
It should not be difficult for companies to extend EU
practices and policies elsewhere because they already have systems in place,
said Nicole Ozer, director of technology and civil liberties at the American
Civil Liberties Union of California.
Companies' promises are less reassuring than laws, she
said: "If user privacy is going to be properly protected, the law has to
require it."
Additional reporting by agencies
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