Tag: Facebook

  • Brazilian court orders Facebook to remove offensive posts on Franco

    Brazilian court orders Facebook to remove offensive posts on Franco

    A Brazilian court on Wednesday ordered Facebook to remove “false information’’ related to slain politician Marielle Franco within 24 hours.

    Facebook must “use all the available instruments to prevent the publication of new offensive posts’’ on Franco, the court statement quoted judge, Jorge Novelle, as saying.

    Franco’s sister and her partner had lodged a complaint against Facebook for spreading false and slanderous information about the popular councillor and human rights activist, who was shot dead in Rio de Janeiro on March 14.

    Posts on Facebook had claimed that Franco, who comes from one of Rio’s poorest neighbourhoods, had links with “bandits’’ and drug traffickers.

    Before her death, Franco criticised a recent government decision to make the army responsible for security in crime-ridden Rio de Janeiro state.

    Her killing brought hundreds of thousands of protesters to the streets.

    “It is not to be tolerated that the death of Marielle, martyr of contemporary history in Brazil, should be repeated day by day’’ by spreading “slander against the dead, hatred, racial and gender prejudice and abuse’’ on social media, Novelle said.

    The court did not say how it would penalise Facebook if the social media company did not comply with the order.

    Facebook is also involved in a data privacy scandal.

    The killing of Franco is seen as part of a mounting wave of political violence in Brazil, where former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s campaign buses were fired on late Tuesday.

    Lula was on neither of the two buses travelling in southern Parana state, and there were no injuries.

    President Michel Temer said that “this wave of violence’’ could not continue and that it was necessary to “pacify the country.’’

    Lula, a former trade unionist, who held the presidency from 2003 to 2011, is campaigning for the Oct. 7 presidential elections in spite a corruption conviction that could soon land him in jail.

     

  • Facebook “show of remorse” not enough in data scandal: German official

    Johannes Caspar, the German government official responsible for policing the activities of Facebook, on Wednesday criticised the U.S. social media company’s reaction in the ongoing Cambridge Analytica data scandal.

    “In so far it must be feared that this scandal will not result in any concrete consequences beyond Facebook’s apology statement and show of remorse,” Caspar told the newspaper “Handelsblatt”.

    “It is and will remain Facebook’s business model to collect data and make it accessible to people with the right profiles in exchange for money,” he said.

    Caspar attended a high-level meeting between German Justice Minster Katarina Barley (SPD) and senior Facebook representatives in Berlin on Monday.

    The data protection officer subsequently lamented that no convincing proposals had been made on behalf of Facebook to redress the situation.

    Barley has demanded a “comprehensive investigation” into whether German users were affected by the illegal use of information from millions of Facebook profiles during “electoral strategy” work by the company Cambridge Analytica for the U.S.

    Trump presidential campaign and the British Leave campaign during the Brexit referendum.

    The justice minister went as far as to describe the social network as a “threat to democracy and the rule of law”.

    She further emphasized that it was the responsibility and right of the European Union (EU) and its member state governments to determine the rules of the game by which tech companies must operate in the bloc.

    According to media reports, Cambridge Analytica used an application designed by the Russian academic Aleksandr Kogan to illegally access the data of around 50 million Facebook users.

    The information was used for targeted campaign advertisements, “micro-targeting” to sway voters in favor of casting their ballot
    for U.S. President Donald Trump or to vote Leave in the British referendum.

    In a recent appearance before the British parliament, ex-Cambridge programmer Christopher Wylie shocked delegates by stating that he had not doubt that his former employer had manipulated the Brexit referendum and broken the law.

     

  • Facebook denies logging people’s calls, SMS without permission

    Facebook denies logging people’s calls, SMS without permission

    The Facebook social media platform for connecting, communicating and collaborating has denied it is logging people’s call and SMS (text) history without their permission.

    TheNewsGuru reports, in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, there have been massive reports and allegations that the social media platform is logging the call and SMS (text) history of users on the platform without their permission.

    “This is not the case,” Facebook said in a statement recently and then went further to explain the Call and SMS features on its Messenger and Facebook Lite apps.

    “Call and text history logging is part of an opt-in feature for people using Messenger or Facebook Lite on Android.

    “This helps you find and stay connected with the people you care about, and provides you with a better experience across Facebook.

    “People have to expressly agree to use this feature. If, at any time, they no longer wish to use this feature they can turn it off in settings, and all previously shared call and text history shared via that app is deleted,” Facebook explained.

    The social media platform went further to state that when users sign up for Messenger or Facebook Lite on Android, or log into Messenger on an Android device, they are given the option to continuously upload their contacts as well as their call and text history.

    “When this feature is enabled, uploading your contacts also allows us to use information like when a call or text was made or received.

    “This feature does not collect the content of your calls or text messages. Your information is securely stored and we do not sell this information to third parties,” it said.

     

  • Women entrepreneurship: Facebook unveils SheMeansBusiness in Nigeria

    Socia media giant, Facebook, on Tuesday in Lagos unveiled an initiative known as SheMeansBusiness to boost women entrepreneurship in Nigeria.

    Facebook’s Public Policy Director, Africa, Ms Ebele Okobi, said at the launch that the initiative was designed to inspire and train female entrepreneurs.

    Okobi said that the initiative would inspire women to start and grow their own businesses.

    According to Okobi, a recent study conducted by Development Economics on behalf of Facebook, shows that businesses set up by women in Nigeria in the next five years, hold the key to unlocking N19.7 billion for Nigeria’s economy.

    According to her, the study also shows that such businesses have the opportunity of creating 8.9 million jobs.

    ”We know that when women do better, economies do better.

    ”The study conducted by Development Economics further highlights this, with the research suggesting that an estimated seven million new businesses could be set up by women in Nigeria by 2021.

    ”This places a greater importance on women’s entrepreneurial ambitions for overall economic and social development of the country,” she said.

    The Policy Programmes Manager, EMEA, Facebook, Ms Sherry Dzinoreva, said that the initiative was the first in Africa, noting that it had been launched in Turkey, United Kingdom, and Mexico, among other countries.

    Dzinorewa said that SheMeansBusiness was aimed to train 50,000 female small and mediun entrepreneurs and create opportunities that would inspire and empower others.

    SMB Sales Manager, EMEA, Facebook, Ms Abi Williams, said that Facebook created platforms that democratised marketing and capitalised on the use of mobile phones.

    Williams advised small and medium business operators to utilise opportunities provided by Facebook as a digital platform.

    She listed funds constraint, lack of knowledge of how to start and unpreparedness as some hindrances to women’s development of interest in businesses.

    According to her, in order to bridge the confidence gap, it is imperative for women to be connected to people who will motivate them to do more.

    She said that such motivations should include the desire to make money and create jobs.

    Ms Afua Osei, Co-founder of ‘She Leads Africa’, said that the organisation was partnering with Facebook to train women in SMEs to grow their businesses.

    Osei said that ‘She Leads Africa’ would continue partnership with Facebook in order to expand access to the digital skills necessary to move African businesses forward.

    She said that with the right digital tools and support, African women would compete at the global level.

    According to her, SheMeansBusiness will bring together thousands of female entrepreneurs in a series of workshops and training sessions across six cities in Nigeria.

    The six cities include Lagos, Kaduna, Port Harcourt, Ibadan, Abuja and Aba.

     

  • Facebook’s response to data scandal has ‘diminished’ trust — EU

    Facebook must do more to address allegations of large-scale data mining, the EU has said, warning that the recent Cambridge Analytica scandal threatens democracy and has diminished trust in the social media giant.

    Facebook has come under fire after a co-founder of data analysis firm Cambridge Analytica told an undercover reporter that information from about 50 million Facebook users was taken without their consent and used for U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign.

    The issue has broad “consequences for the democratic process,’’ EU Justice Commissioner, Vera Jourova, wrote to Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer, Sheryl Sandberg, in a letter seen Tuesday.

    Jourova added that her concerns were “not alleviated’’ by Facebook’s response to the scandal.

    “This is particularly disappointing given our efforts to build a relationship based on trust with you and your colleagues,” Jourova wrote. “This trust is now diminished.”

    Facebook has long been used for political marketing, she noted, adding that the apparent lack of transparency and alleged abuse of personal data could have a “negative impact on the quality of this debate and even on our electoral process.”

    The commissioner called on Facebook to “take steps to regain the trust of its users and meet its obligation to society.”

    Jourova asked whether the data of EU citizens had been affected by the recent scandal, whether a similar thing could happen again, how Facebook would apply EU privacy laws and whether stricter rules are needed, giving the company two weeks to respond.

    Cambridge Analytica is accused of illegally obtaining information from Facebook users after misleadingly gaining access under the guise of an app.

     

  • Facebook shares dip as U.S. regulator announces privacy probe

    Facebook Inc shares fell to 6.5 per cent on Monday after United States-consumer-protection-regulator said it was investigating how the social-network allowed data of 50 million users to get into the hands of a political-consultancy.

    Scrutiny by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, which generally confirms the existence of an investigation only in cases of significant public interest.

    In addition to pressure from lawmakers in the United States and Europe, Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg was to explain how his company handles user data.

    Facebook shares briefly dipped below 150 dollars on Monday for the first time since July 2017, before recouping some losses. They were down 3.1 per cent at 154.37 dollars in afternoon trading.

    At the day’s session low the company had lost 100 billion dollars in market value since March 17.

    Newspapers first reported at such date that Facebook member data was improperly used by consultants Cambridge Analytica to target U.S. and British voters in close-run elections.

    “FTC takes very seriously recent press reports raising substantial concerns about the privacy practices of Facebook,” the regulator said in a statement.

    “Today, the FTC is confirming that it has an open non-public investigation into these practices.”

    The investigation is broader than looking into whether Facebook violated a 2011 consent order it reached with the FTC over its privacy practices, official sources.

    “We remain strongly committed to protecting people’s information,” Facebook Deputy Chief Privacy Officer Rob Sherman said in a statement on Monday.

    “We appreciate the opportunity to answer questions the FTC may have.”

    If the FTC finds Facebook violated terms of the consent decree, it has the power to fine it thousands of dollars a day per violation, which could add up to billions of dollars.

    The FTC’s move to make its probe public comes as lawmakers in the United States and Europe put more pressure on Facebook and Zuckerberg to explain the company’s privacy practices.

    “Facebook’s failure to protect confidential user information likely violated specific legally binding commitments.

    ”It also violates basic norms and standards,” said U.S. Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal, a member of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee.

    The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee said on Monday it had invited the CEOs of Facebook, Alphabet Inc and Twitter Inc to testify at an April 10 hearing on data privacy.

    A bipartisan coalition of 37 state attorneys general also wrote to Facebook on Monday.

    They demanded to know about the company’s role in the manipulation of users’ data by Cambridge Analytica and its policies and procedures for protecting private data.

    The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee and U.S. Senate Commerce Committee have already formally asked Zuckerberg to appear at a congressional hearing.

    Earlier in the day in Europe, the European Union Justice Commissioner asked Facebook if the company is “absolutely certain” that the Cambridge Analytica incident could not be repeated.

    Zuckerberg apologized last week for the mistakes the company had made.

    He promised to restrict developers’ access to user information as part of a plan to protect privacy. He also said sorry in full-page advertisements in British and U.S. newspapers.

     

  • U.S. confirms investigation into Facebook over data privacy scandal

    The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on Monday confirmed that it was investigating Facebook over its privacy practices.

    The commission is looking into reports that Facebook failed to honour promises to comply with existing privacy protections, including a data privacy deal between the EU and the U.S. agreed in 2016.

    “The FTC is firmly and fully committed to using all of its tools to protect the privacy of consumers,” said Tom Pahl, Acting Director of the FTC, in a statement.

    Facebook Chief Executive, Mark Zuckerberg, has come under pressure over a data-mining scandal involving the British firm Cambridge Analytica.

    Information from about 50 million Facebook users was taken without their consent and used in work Cambridge Analytica did for U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, according to a whistle-blower, who helped set up the company.

    Zuckerberg took out full-page ads in Sunday newspapers in the U.S. and Britain to apologise.

    “We have a responsibility to protect your information. If we can’t, we don’t deserve it,’’ Zuckerberg said in the apology. “I promise to do better for you.’’

    The privacy deal between the EU and the U.S. is known as Privacy Shield.

    It replaced an earlier framework that the EU’s top court struck down as insufficient after revelations in 2013 of mass spying by U.S. intelligence authorities.

    The deal aims to prevent the indiscriminate collection of Europeans’ private data via the internet.

     

  • Like Facebook, Google; Twitter bans cryptocurrency adverts

    Twitter Inc is to ban most advertising of cryptocurrencies on its platform, joining Facebook and Google in a clampdown on the nascent industry, the company said in a statement.

    The San Francisco-based firm will this week launch a policy that prohibits advertising of initial coin offerings (ICOs), a form of crowd funding used to raise cash by creating new coins.

    Also adverts that promote token sales and crypto wallet services, the company said in a statement.

    The policy will also ban adverts from crypto-exchanges, with some limited exceptions.

    Twitter said this month it was taking measures to prevent crypto-related accounts from “engaging with others in a deceptive manner’’, but it has faced calls to go further after bans by Facebook and Google.

    Facebook restricted crypto-related adverts in February, while Google announced a ban on March 14 that comes into force in June.

  • Compromised election: Buhari’s Govt. reacts to Cambridge Analytica revelations

    After TheNewsGuru reported the President Muhammadu Buhari administration silence to Cambridge Analytica revelations is alarming, the government has stood up to the occasion requesting the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) to address allegations it actually hired the data analytics firm or not.

    TheNewsGuru reports data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica and its parent company, SCL Elections, confirmed playing a role in Nigeria’s 2015 general elections, but denied it had accessed Buhari’s financial and medical records, and denied hacking into his private emails.

    “We can confirm that SCL Elections was hired in December 2014 to provide advertising and marketing services in support of the Goodluck Jonathan campaign,” SCL stated, adding: “During an election campaign, it is normal for SCL Elections to meet with vendors seeking to provide services as a subcontractor. SCL Elections did not take possession of or use any personal information from such individuals for any purposes. SCL Elections does not use ‘hacked’ or ‘stolen’ data”.

    However, several confessional statements made by employees of the firm, seven of them, with close knowledge of the campaign, showed that Cambridge Analytica did more than just providing advertising and marketing services in support of Jonathan.

    The employees, who have described how Cambridge Analytica worked with people they believed were Israeli computer hackers, who offered Cambridge Analytica the access to Buhari’s financial and medical records, confessed a Nigerian billionaire paid Cambridge Analytica about N1 billion to actually work to sway the 2015 general election votes in favour of Jonathan.

    Reacting to the development, Senior Special Assistant to President Buhari on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, in Abuja said such unfair practice undermined the country’s democracy.

    “Nothing undermines a country’s democracy as such unfair practices. The Cambridge Analytica hacking scandal committed against candidate Buhari by the PDP in 2015 in which billions of Naira was paid out to the Israelis and other hackers have shown that the former ruling party lacks both the integrity and credibility to talk about election rigging. Instead of explaining their role in the scandal, the nation is greeted by stunning silence,” Shehu said.

    “Do they think this will simply blow away?” he further queried, adding: “Rigging is PDP’s main area of core competence and its party leaders are drowning men who won’t mind clutching at any straw for political survival”.

    Shehu also advised the leadership of the PDP to stop raising false alarms in order to gain public sympathy and divert attention from its “abysmal past record and failures”.

    “They should, instead, address the concerns raised about their role in the mass data harvesting at the heart of the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica scandal, following the revelation that they hacked into Candidate Muhammadu Buhari’s personal data in the run-up to the 2015 general elections.

    “That is why President Nixon resigned to avoid impeachment when they hacked into the opposition, Democratic Party records, and this is why a Special Counsel is investigating the alleged Russian interference in the US presidential election, and if President Donald Trump’s campaign is complicit in the attempted subversion of democracy in that country,” said the presidential aide.

    He also lambasted the leading opposition party for its decision to drag the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to the United Nations (UN) over alleged plan or plot to rig the 2019 general elections, describing the PDP move as “not only laughable and puerile”, but that it “also demonstrate the level of desperation that is haunting the opposition leaders”.

    Shehu said President Buhari was passionately committed to free and fair elections in the country, noting: “and for a man who joined forces with local and international observers to ensure a free and fair election which brought him to power in 2015, the President would under no circumstances tolerate any attempt to derail constitutional democracy.

    “The outcome of the gubernatorial elections in Edo, Ondo and Anambra States stand as clear examples of President Buhari’s commitment to free and fair elections in the country, and Nigerians should indeed be wary of PDP’s desperate propaganda.

    “For the PDP to be preaching free and fair elections is like a street-walker preaching about chastity.

    “We must recall that the PDP postponed the 2015 general elections in the guise of national security challenges because defeat was staring it starkly in the face. However, despite the delay tactics, it was resoundingly defeated when the polls finally held.

    “The PDP has lost every moral ground and it is mortally afraid of facing the 2019 general elections because Nigerians will always remember their past and punish them one more time for economically plundering the country.”

    According to Shehu, “by dragging the United Nations into its political propaganda, the PDP is indirectly suggesting that it is afraid to face the voters in 2019.

    “Rather than hiding behind allegations of a plot to rig the elections, the opposition party should work harder to win back the trust of voters instead of spreading the false alarm to gain international sympathy.

    “It is unfortunate that the PDP is desperately trying all dirty tricks, including the exploitation of tragedy, for political advantage.”

    However, Shehu, and the presidency is yet to address the part of the revelations that alludes Buhari and his team hired AKPD, the firm of former Barack Obama strategist David Axelrod, to push slick-social-media-heavy, Obama-esque message of hope in favour of Buhari.

     

  • Cambridge Analytica accepts probe into data practices

    Data analytics firm, Cambridge Analytica has accepted a probe into how it handled about 50 million data of users on Facebook it obtained from Cambridge University Professor Aleksandr Kogan.

    Kogan reportedly harvested the Facebook data using a personality quiz app and shared it Cambridge Analytica.

    Facebook founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg had since addressed some of the issues, with Cambridge Analytica saying the company will undergo an independent third-party audit to determine whether it still holds any data covertly obtained from Facebook users.

    The data analytics firm acting CEO, Alexander Tayler, apologized for the recent controversy, and said Cambridge Analytica believed the data had been obtained “in line with Facebook’s terms of service and data protection laws.”

    As it has claimed before, Cambridge Analytica says it destroyed the mishandled Facebook data years ago.

    Also, Facebook said recently it was working with a firm to conduct its own audit of Cambridge Analytica, but the investigation is on pause while the United Kingdom’s Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) works on its own probe.

    And, Tayler has said his company is cooperating with the ICO.

    He, while casting aspersions on the contractor Christopher Wylie, who has become a major source for reporting on Cambridge Analytica, also promised to release more information on the company’s practices.

    While discussing SCL Elections, Cambridge Analytica’s parent organization, he seemed to allude to comments made by his predecessor, Alexander Nix, about using entrapment for political gain.

    “We take the disturbing recent allegations of unethical practices in our non-US political business very seriously,” Tayler writes.

    “The Board has launched a full and independent investigation into SCL Elections’ past practices, and its findings will be shared publicly,” he added.