Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg. AFP FILE PHOTO
Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said on Tuesday that he
agreed “in spirit” with a strict new European Union law on data privacy
but stopped short of committing to it as the standard for the social
network across the world.
As Facebook reels from a
scandal over the mishandling of personal information belonging to
millions of users, the company is facing demands to improve privacy and
learn lessons from the landmark EU law scheduled to take effect next
month.
Zuckerberg told Reuters in a phone
interview that Facebook was working on a version of the law that would
work globally, bringing some European privacy guarantees worldwide, but
the 33-year-old billionaire demurred when asked what parts of the law he
would not extend worldwide.
“We’re still nailing down
details on this, but it should directionally be, in spirit, the whole
thing,” Zuckerberg said. He did not elaborate.
His
comments signal that U.S. Facebook users, many of them still angry over
the company’s admission that political consultancy Cambridge Analytica
got hold of Facebook data on 50 million members, could find themselves
in a worse position than Europeans.
The European law,
called the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), is the biggest
overhaul of online privacy since the birth of the internet, giving
Europeans the right to know what data is stored on them and the right to
have it deleted.
Apple Inc (AAPL.O) and some other
tech firms have said they do plan to give people in the United States
and elsewhere the same protections and rights that Europeans will gain.
Shares
of Facebook closed up 0.5 percent on Tuesday at $156.11. They are down
more than 15 percent since March 16, when the scandal broke over
Cambridge Analytica.
Push for data privacy
Privacy
advocacy groups have been urging Facebook and its Silicon Valley
competitors such as Alphabet Inc’s Google to apply EU data laws
worldwide, largely without success.
“We want Facebook
and Google and all the other companies to immediately adopt in the
United States and worldwide any new protections that they implement in
Europe,” said Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital
Democracy, in Washington.
Zuckerberg said many of the
tools that are part of the law, such as the ability of users to delete
all their data, are already available for people on Facebook.
“We
think that this is a good opportunity to take that moment across the
rest of the world,” he said. “The vast majority of what is required here
are things that we’ve already had for years across the world for
everyone.”
Google and Facebook are the global leaders
in internet ad revenue. Both based in California, they possess enormous
amounts of data on billions of people.
Google has declined to comment on its plans.
When
GDPR takes effect on May 25, people in EU countries will gain the right
to transfer their data to other social networks, for example. Facebook
and its competitors will also need to be much more specific about how
they plan to use people’s data, and they will need to get explicit
consent.
GDPR is likely to hurt profit at Facebook
because it could reduce the value of ads if the company cannot use
personal information as freely and the added expense of hiring lawyers
to ensure compliance with the new law.
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.”
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