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Facebook says it no longer lets companies like Netflix, Spotify read users' private messages

Facebook said the partnerships did allow features like “messaging integrations” but nearly all have been shut down over the past few months.

FACEBOOK HAS ACKNOWLEDGED that it gave some companies more extensive access to users’ personal data than it has previously revealed, letting them read private messages or see the names of friends without consent, following a New York Times report.

The newspaper on Wednesday detailed special arrangements between Facebook and companies such as Microsoft, Netflix and Spotify, in the latest revelations on how the social network shares user data.

Facebook responded to the report in a blog post, which said the partnerships did allow features like “messaging integrations” but nearly all have been shut down over the past few months, except for deals with Apple and Amazon.

None of the deals gave outside companies access to data without user consent, it said. The company also said a separate product called “instant personalization,” which powered Bing’s features, was shut down in 2014 though it acknowledged it should not have left the data exchange interface up.

Sharing with 150 partners 

The New York Times reported that some 150 companies – including powerful partners like Amazon, Microsoft, Netflix and Spotify – could access detailed information about Facebook users, including data about their friends.

According to documents seen by the Times, Facebook allowed Microsoft’s Bing search engine to see names of Facebook users’ friends without consent and gave Netflix and Spotify the ability to read private messages.

The report said Amazon was able to obtain user names and contact information through their friends, and Yahoo could view streams of friends’ posts.

While some of the deals date back as far as 2010, the Times said they remained active as late as 2017 – and some were still in effect this year.

“It appears that Facebook has not been honest with Congress or the public about how it treats its users’ data,” Congressman Frank Pallone, a Democrat, said in a tweet.

Facebook’s head of developer platforms and programs, Konstantinos Papamiltiadis, said in a blog post that the Times report referred to partnerships that enabled “social experiences – like seeing recommendations from their Facebook friends – on other popular apps and websites.”

None of those partnerships or features “gave companies access to information without people’s permission,” he said, adding that the deals did not violate a 2012 privacy settlement with the US Federal Trade Commission.

Papamiltiadis said, however, that “we’ve been public about these features and partnerships over the years because we wanted people to actually use them.”

But he said most of the features are now gone.

Netflix, Spotify deny reading messages 

Netflix said that the feature was used to make the streaming service “more social” by allowing users to make recommendations to friends, but that it stopped using it in 2015.

“At no time did we access people’s private messages on Facebook or ask for the ability to do so,” Netflix said in a statement.

Spotify offered a similar response, indicating the music service “cannot read users’ private Facebook inbox messages across any of our current integrations.”

The Canadian bank RBC, also cited in The New York Times, said the deal with Facebook “was limited to the development of a service that enabled clients to facilitate payment transactions to their Facebook friends,” and that it was discontinued in 2015.

Senator Brian Schatz said the latest revelations highlight a need for tougher controls on how tech companies handle user data.

“It has never been more clear,” Schatz tweeted. “We need a federal privacy law. They are never going to volunteer to do the right thing.”

Lawsuit  

Facebook’s woes mounted Wednesday as it faced a lawsuit alleging privacy violations related to data leaked to a consultancy working on Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, and as a new report suggested it shared more data with partners than it has acknowledged.

Facebook shares already sagging under the weight of the social network’s troubles ended the trading day down 7.25% to $133.24 and slipped even lower in after-market trades.

The suit filed by the attorney general for the US capital Washington is likely the first by an official US body that could impose consequences on the world’s leading social network for data misuse.

“Facebook failed to protect the privacy of its users and deceived them about who had access to their data and how it was used,” said Attorney General Karl Racine in a statement.

“Facebook put users at risk of manipulation by allowing companies like Cambridge Analytica and other third-party applications to collect personal data without users’ permission. Today’s lawsuit is about making Facebook live up to its promise to protect its users’ privacy.”

The suit filed in Superior Court in Washington seeks an injunction “to ensure Facebook puts in place protocols and safeguards to monitor users’ data and to make it easier for users to control their privacy settings,” and demands “restitution” for consumers.

Facebook said: “We’re reviewing the complaint and look forward to continuing our discussions with attorneys general in DC and elsewhere.”

The social network has admitted that up to 87 million users may have had their data hijacked by Cambridge Analytica, which shut down weeks after the news emerged on its handling of private user information.

A whistleblower at the consultancy, which worked on Trump’s presidential campaign, said it used Facebook data to develop profiles of users who were targeted with personalized messages that could have played on their fears.

The scandal has triggered a series of investigations and broad review by Facebook on how it shares user data with third parties.

© – AFP 2019

With reporting from Associated Press 

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    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute TechBuzz Ireland
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    Dec 20th 2018, 7:35 AM

    Sure. We all believe you…. Till the data breach..

    257
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    Mute Paraic
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:53 AM

    Why does the Journal insist on either Facebook or Twitter to comment?

    189
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    Mute Bewarethebeardz
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:00 AM

    @Paraic: no comment

    35
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    Mute BarronVonVaderHam
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:04 AM

    @Paraic: so it can speak on your behalf, just commented on ‘blah blah’ on the journal. Its turned on by default to benifit ad revenues. You’re right there’s no alternative login options as it wouldnt be advantageous enough, everyone should make a utility account for all this nonsense.

    44
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    Mute Maurice Bourke
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:30 AM

    ‘Messaging integration’
    Orwellian newspeak term of the day.

    155
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    Mute emer caffrey
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:03 AM

    “Private” messages; private
    US /ˈprɑɪ·vɪt/
    private adjective (PERSONAL)

    for the use of or belonging to one particular person or group only, or not shared or available to other people:

    78
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    Mute Paraic
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:54 AM

    @emer caffrey:

    data mining

    noun

    COMPUTING

    noun: data mining; noun: datamining

    the practice of examining large pre-existing databases in order to generate new information.

    16
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    Mute Dnomsed Nalon
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:09 AM

    @emer caffrey: It’s a free service offered to you. You’re info is the product. They have every right to use anything you share on their platform.

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    Mute Paraic
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:37 AM

    @Dnomsed Nalon: True, except Facebook has been found to be repeatedly in breach of the end user agreement, and that’s not fair game.

    36
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    Mute Breandán O Conchúir
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:50 AM

    @Dnomsed Nalon: no they don’t they have the right to use the data we agree to let them use

    17
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    Mute Austin Rock
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    Dec 20th 2018, 10:10 AM

    @Dnomsed Nalon: They don’t big mistake! could be very costly

    6
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    Mute Dnomsed Nalon
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    Dec 20th 2018, 10:11 AM

    @Breandán O Conchúir: You should publicly share a post on Facebook stating that they don’t have the right to use it. That should sort you out.

    5
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    Mute Scorpionvenomm
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    Dec 20th 2018, 7:39 AM

    Bla bla bla bla bla bla bla bla

    34
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    Mute BarronVonVaderHam
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:38 AM

    Only a generation ago the word privacy had a different meaning, it was something people had. If youre still using this app you are a marketing tool, messages, photographs, relationships, political views, tastes, habbits, all sold for targeted advertising. It’s an effective sheep dog.

    57
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    Mute joe
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:25 AM

    @BarronVonVaderHam: and who cares. Were you going to sell that data yourself? Unless you’re up to weird stuff, who cares!

    7
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    Mute BarronVonVaderHam
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:37 AM

    @joe: was I going to sell my private messages and photos? Are you a bit soft in the head? And of course, “unless you where up to something weird” the go to quote, sure post you name address and phone number on here Joe? No? How about the last 20 photos on your phone, buy any presents online this christmas? From where? How much? Where did you have them delivered? Whats your location right now? Can you post all that in your next post joe? That is, unless you’ve been up to something weird

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    Mute BarronVonVaderHam
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    Dec 20th 2018, 3:15 PM

    @BarronVonVaderHam: must’ve been up to something weird

    7
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    Mute tomcolgan
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:04 AM

    Netflix and ….

    15
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    Mute BarronVonVaderHam
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:41 AM

    @tomcolgan: chilling

    11
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    Mute Lisa Saputo
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    Dec 20th 2018, 8:04 AM

    Oh well, that’s ok then. (Says I who still uses it!)

    13
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    Mute Free Online Games
    Favourite Free Online Games
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:10 AM

    A kind warm hearted bunch.

    12
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    Mute Arch Angel
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    Dec 20th 2018, 12:06 PM

    @Free Online Games: Facebook, one of the wealthiest companies on the planet, are the custodians and guardians of our privacy and would never allow any of us unwashed to view this data… Oh that’s a big bag of money… step this way…

    10
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    Mute yoser hughes
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    Dec 20th 2018, 2:12 PM

    The term private is obviously lost on them.

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    Mute Who cares?
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    Dec 20th 2018, 1:26 PM

    Those messages are not one bit private, which I recently found out with a lengthy ban!

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    Mute Seamus Mac
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    Dec 20th 2018, 12:51 PM

    That’s nice of them.

    6
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    Mute Sarah Ennis
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    Dec 20th 2018, 10:10 AM

    Thanks guys

    5
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    Mute Barra O Brien
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    Dec 20th 2018, 9:38 PM

    Not unless they pay for it

    1
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