Privacy
campaigners have welcomed a report that Facebook is to askusers to opt
into any changes in theway it uses their personal information.
The social network previously announced alterations to its members' settings without asking for fresh consent.
The
website is changing its policy after an investigation bythe US Federal
Trade Commission, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal
Facebook is not commenting on the story at this time.
The report suggests the site has also agreed to privacy audits by an independent organisation over the next 20 years.
However, it says the FTC does not prescribe how consent should be obtained.
Suspicion
"Facebook
has historically been extremely resistant to transparency in its own
operations, so we welcome measures that would force the company to
obtain express consent of its users," said the London based advocacy
group Privacy International.
"However,
it seems likely that the FTC's demands will only present a temporary
obstacle in the path of Facebook's ambitions to collect its users'
information.
"Faced
with reams of small print, most users are likely to automatically agree
to policy changes, with each change bringing us one step closer to
Zuckerberg's vision of a privacy-free future."
The
website's founder, Mark Zuckerberg, was questioned about the firm's
privacy policies on the US television network PBS' Charlie Rose show
earlier this week.
"You have control over every single thing you've shared on Facebook," he said, "You can take it down."
He
also said other search engines and advertising networks gathered "huge
amount of information" about internet users through cookies, which he
claimed was "less transparent than what is happening at Facebook".
“Start Quote
Users are not social networking sites' primary customers, advertisers and marketers are”
Andrew Charlesworth University of Bristol
Complaints
The FTC's intervention is being linked to the Washington-based campaign group, Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC).
It
filed a complaint with the commission in December 2009 claiming that
privacy setting changes "violate user expectations, diminish user
privacy and contradict Facebook's own representations".
EPIC noted that the website's users, security experts and others had voiced opposition to the change.
The organisation filed a follow-up complaint in 2010 claiming the social network had violated consumer protection law.
This
year, EPIC also asked the FTC to investigate Facebook's use of facial
recognition software on users' uploaded photographs and changes that
gave the firm "far greater ability to disclose the personal information
of its users to its business partners".
Knock-on effects
Facebook says it has more than 800 million members who have used the site at least once in the past 30 days.
The
Reuters news agency recently reported that the site's revenues totalled
$1.6bn (£1bn) in the first six months of the year thanks to its
popularity with advertisers.
Facebook
does not release detailed results as it is not a publicly traded
company, although there is speculation it will float its stock in 2012.
Legal experts say any settlement with the FTC is likely to have implications for other internet firms.
"Users
are not social networking sites' primary customers, advertisers and
marketers are," said Andrew Charlesworth, director of the centre for IT
and law at the University of Bristol.
"While
the FTC settlement indicates sites must be more open about the ways
they make personal data available, and provide users with greater
control, Facebook and others will already be rethinking the techniques
they use to persuade users to keep their personal data publicly
accessible."
No comments:
Post a Comment