Zuckerberg went on to note that many other Facebook
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State attorneys general in Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey have opened investigations into the Cambridge mess. And some have rallied to a movement that urges people to delete their Facebook accounts entirely.That audit will be a giant undertaking, polyurethane wheel said David Carroll, a media researcher at the Parsons School of Design in New York — one that he said will likely turn up a vast number of apps that did “troubling, distressing things. But it’s far from clear whether he’s won over US and European authorities, much less the broader public whose status updates provide Facebook with an endless stream of data it uses to sell targeted ads. Zuckerberg said Facebook will “build a tool” that lets users see if their information had been impacted by the Cambridge leak, suggesting that the company won’t be notifying people automatically. Zuckerberg and Facebook’s No.On March 21, the generally reclusive Zuckerberg sat for an interview on CNN and gave another to the publication Wired, addressing reports that Cambridge Analytica purloined the data of more than 50 million Facebook users in order to sway elections. (That move came too late to stop Cambridge.Facebook shares have dropped some 8 per cent, lopping about 46 billion off the company’s market value, since the revelations were first published.”

Zuckerberg went on to note that many other Facebook officials might be more appropriate witnesses depending on what Congress wanted to know.“He didn’t acknowledge the harm or potential harm to the affected users,” Garcia said. In the CNN interview, for instance, he said he would be “happy” to testify before Congress — but only if it was “the right thing to do.“I am really sorry that happened,” Zuckerberg said on CNN. “The question is, can you really trust Facebook,” he said. Zuckerberg’s apology, for instance, seemed rushed and pro forma to Helio Fred Garcia, a crisis-management professor at NYU and Columbia University.Sandy Parakilas, who worked in data protection for Facebook in 2011 and 2012, told a UK parliamentary committee Wednesday that the company was vigilant about its network security but lax when it came to protecting users’ data.) And he laid out a series of technical changes that will further limit the data such apps can collect, pledged to notify users when outsiders misuse their information and said Facebook will “audit” apps that exhibit troubling behaviour.Paul Argenti, a business professor at Dartmouth, said that while Zuckerberg’s comments hit the right notes, they still probably aren’t enough.

Facebook has a “responsibility” to protect its users’ data, he added, noting that if it fails, “we don’t deserve to have the opportunity to serve people.In what has become one of the worst backlashes Facebook has ever seen, politicians in the US and Britain have called for Zuckerberg to explain its data practices in detail.At another point, the Facebook chief seemed to favour regulation for Facebook and other internet giants. He said personal data including email addresses and in some cases private messages was allowed to leave Facebook servers with no real controls on how the data was used after that. In almost the next breath, however, Zuckerberg steered clear of endorsing a bill that would write such rules into federal law, and instead talked up Facebook’s own voluntary efforts on that front.In the wake of a privacy scandal involving a Trump-connected data-mining firm, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg embarked on a rare media mini-blitz in an attempt to take some of the public and political pressure off the social network.”Even Facebook’s plan to let users know about data leaks may put the onus on users to educate themselves.” Instead, the Facebook chief pointed to steps the company has already taken, such as a 2014 move to restrict the access outside apps had to user data.

At least, that is, the “right” kind of rules, such as ones requiring online political ads to disclose who paid for them.“They’ll fight tooth and nail to fight being regulated,” said Timothy Carone, a Notre Dame business professor.”But on other fronts, Zuckerberg carefully hedged otherwise striking remarks. “I don’t think that question has been answered.”His mea culpa on cable television came a few hours after he acknowledged his company’s mistakes in a Facebook post, but without saying he was sorry. While several experts said Zuckerberg took an important step with the CNN interview, few were convinced that he put the Cambridge issue behind him. “In six months we’ll be having the same conversations, and it’s just going to get worse going into the election. Zuckerberg apologized for a “major breach of trust,” admitted mistakes and outlined steps to protect users following Cambridge’s data grab. 2 executive, Sheryl Sandberg, had been quiet since news broke Friday that Cambridge may have used data improperly obtained from roughly 50 million Facebook users to try to sway elections.”. “I doubt most people realized he was apologizing. Cambridge’s clients included Donald Trump’s general-election campaign. Facebook took this kind of do-it-yourself approach in the case of Russian election meddling, in contrast to Twitter, which notified users who had been exposed to Russian propaganda on its network. The Trump campaign paid the firm 6 million during the 2016 election, although it has since distanced itself from Cambridge





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تاریخ انتشار : سه شنبه 29 مهر 1399 | نظرات ()
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