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Facebook: Congressmen Sent You A Message

Facebook Congress

AP/The Huffington Post   First Posted: 10/19/10 03:18 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:05 PM ET

Mark Zuckerberg was sent a message from a group on Monday, but it wasn't through Facebook.

The co-chairmen of the House Bipartisan Privacy Caucus, Edward Markey (D-Mass) and Joe Barton (R-TX), have sent the Facebook CEO a letter seeking answers in the wake of another round of user privacy concerns, according to the Wall Street Journal. The latest incident, which was revealed on Monday, involved Facebook applications transmitting users' personal identifying information to dozens of advertising and Internet tracking companies.

The Journal reports:

Given Facebook's 500 million users and the amount of information they post on the site, "this series of breaches of consumer privacy is a cause for concern," the lawmakers wrote.

The letter asked Mr. Zuckerberg how many users had been affected by the breach, when Facebook became aware of it, and what changes Facebook plans in order to deal with the problem, among other questions. Facebook must respond by Oct. 27.

A company spokesperson suggested it was a stretch to call this incident a "breach," calling the word choice "curious at best."

The latest Facebook privacy fiasco shows that the world's largest online social hub is having a hard time putting this thorny issue behind it even as it continues to attract users and become indispensible to many of them. Facebook said it is working to fix the problem, and was quick to point out that the leaks were not intentional, but a consequence of basic Web mechanisms.

"In most cases, developers did not intend to pass this information, but did so because of the technical details of how browsers work," said Mike Vernal, a Facebook engineer, in a blog post Monday.

In a statement, Facebook said there is "no evidence that any personal information was misused or even collected as a result of this issue."

Even so, some privacy advocates said it's problematic that the information was leaked at all, regardless of what happened to it. Facebook needs its users to trust it with their data because if they don't, they won't use the site to share as much as they do now.

"Facebook has been assuring users for a very long time that their personal information will not be available to advertisers," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center.

At issue are user IDs, the unique identifier tied to every person on Facebook. These IDs can be used to find users' names, gender and any information they've made visible to "everyone" on the Internet through their privacy settings.

"It's their entire friends' lists, their likes, their biographical information," Rotenberg said. "Facebook gets access to it and now it's leaking out to advertisers."

The Journal said these IDs could be included in what's known as "referrers." That is what websites send to other sites to tell them where the user came from. Normally, these wouldn't tell the sites who these users are. But that becomes possible when the referers include a person's social network ID.

In one case, these IDs were then embedded in a "cookie," which tracks users as they navigate the Web, by an online data collection company, the Journal said. That meant that Facebook users' names and browsing habits could be linked up.

The company, Rapleaf, said this did not happen intentionally and it has since fixed the problem.

"As of last week, no Facebook ids are being transmitted to ad networks in conjunction with the use of any Rapleaf service," the company said in a blog post Sunday.

Facebook's more than 500 million users share varying amounts of private information online, and over the years the company has come under fire from privacy advocates for pushing people to reveal more about themselves to everyone on the Internet. At the same time, the company also allows users to set up privacy settings for nearly everything they share on the site.

There are some exceptions, though. Users' names, profile photo and gender if they specify it are always public. For a slew of other details, Facebook gives users controls so that they can hide friends list, photos, work information and e-mail addresses.

Facebook said the knowledge of a user's ID does not give anyone access to that user's private information. But that's not the problem, said Peter Eckersley, senior staff technologist for the digital rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation.

"The problem is that ad companies can know who you are at all," he said.

Eckersley said the "referer" problem isn't new, nor is it necessarily limited to Facebook. The Journal did not mention other social networks such as MySpace, which is owned by News Corp., like the Journal.

"We urgently need investigations to determine how many other social networks may be suffering from this type of data leak," he said.

MySpace did not have a comment.

Some, such as media critic Jeff Jarvis, came to Facebook's defense. He called the Journal report an overreaction because the user information was already publicly available.

"The White Pages reveal I use the phone. So?" Jarvis wrote on Twitter. He said in an interview later that traditional media and marketing companies have long exposed far more personal information.

"Publications sell their subscriber lists, manufacturers sell their warranty lists, and those have (people's) real names and addresses. That has long existed," Jarvis said. "What's the real harm here is the key question. The worst harm is that someone delivers to you a more targeted ad."

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Mark Zuckerberg was sent a message from a group on Monday, but it wasn't through Facebook. The co-chairmen of the House Bipartisan Privacy Caucus, Edward Markey (D-Mass) and Joe Barton (R-TX), have...
Mark Zuckerberg was sent a message from a group on Monday, but it wasn't through Facebook. The co-chairmen of the House Bipartisan Privacy Caucus, Edward Markey (D-Mass) and Joe Barton (R-TX), have...
 
 
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
Artamentous
Workplace Democracy!
07:23 PM on 10/19/2010
I'm sorry, but how stupid are people?

So people are upset when they post all sorts of info on Facebook, and now it's being used? It's ridiculous, I thought the whole reason of Facebook was so everyone can learn all sorts of stuff about it? This controversy is so baffling, I mean really, W.T.F?
02:26 PM on 10/19/2010
spacecrook is for lemmings. if you don't want your info sold, play somewhere else
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AlexNYC
Pumps dont work cause the vandals took the handles
02:08 PM on 10/19/2010
Several frienda and acquaintances have been pestering me to join Facebook for years now, I refuse. I just don't trust it.
02:27 PM on 10/19/2010
good for you
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SamEllison
I feel so clean!
01:29 PM on 10/19/2010
I don't Facebook or Myspace or any of them
and still the Geek Squad found 792 cookies
and the like in my last computer.
01:51 PM on 10/19/2010
Have you ever clicked the "keep me logged on" feature on your web mail? Then you have used cookies. HTTP (the protocol used for retrieving pages over the Internet) is "stateless," meaning, the only way for a server to know who you are is for the browser to send back some information that identifies you (information that is supplied by the server). That is normal, as otherwise, you wouldn't be able to log into ANYTHING on the web and have it remember who you are across calls (well, unless you think ugly URLs like http://www.somesite.com/hhelihaehiidkkdihifhiekkidhhiilldkid/thepage.php makes for a pleasant viewing experience, which is the main alternative in the absence of cookies).

Granted, that is a feature that is used by companies who like to track usage. It is used EVERYWHERE (I'm sure on HuffPost, too), as tracking user preferences from a web standpoint is very valuable commodity. It's how companies make money on the web (and HuffPost makes lots of it).
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SamEllison
I feel so clean!
01:57 PM on 10/19/2010
I know how it works and it's called capitalism
but we need some privacy. Which brings us to rules
and regulations, laws, because corporations
have no soul.
01:21 PM on 10/19/2010
This TOOL wants to secretly make millions/billions by constantly selling EVERYONE's personal information. Wake up people, this is what's been happening and what do you get out of it, social networking? Yeah, how many lives have changed for the better since facebook? Reuniting with all the clowns from high school? Telling everyone that doesn't care, what you're eating for dinner tonight? What a joke.
01:53 PM on 10/19/2010
Interacting socially is one of the most fundamental things humans do. That's the thing that drove Facebook to 500 million registered users.

What have phones done to improve people's lives? What about Internet video? How about email? All are examples of technology providing more avenues through which people interact.

Yes, companies make money from it, but so does Gmail offering you free email, Skype offering you free video, and the phone companies offering you some form of phone service. Smoke signals are free, but nobody thinks they are a useful alternative to Internet communications.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:21 PM on 10/19/2010
Who do you think would be the best appointee as Facebook TZAR?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:18 PM on 10/19/2010
Congress did not pass a budget this year.

Congress did not pass one appropriation bill this year.

We are running a $1.3T deficit.

They want to talk about FB and to Steven Colbert.
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SamEllison
I feel so clean!
01:32 PM on 10/19/2010
The senate did not because of teabagger filibusters.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
01:42 PM on 10/19/2010
You just grabbing at this right?

Budget is majority vote only. Not subject to fillubuster. But keep trying to wonder why they would not pass a budget?
01:14 PM on 10/19/2010
let's see how Zucks deals with a congressional hearing - maybe a little bit less arrogant?
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12:52 PM on 10/19/2010
Zucky is selling you out, peeps.
12:50 PM on 10/19/2010
So why exactly is Mark Zuckerburg a billionaire now? How exactly does facebook make billions of dollars? What are they selling?
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12:53 PM on 10/19/2010
they sell all your personal data to the Intel agencies....as well as to marketers.


It`s a gigantic Data Mining Op......Hello ?
12:58 PM on 10/19/2010
I totally understand that. So why would they come out and say things like:

"Facebook has been assuring users for a very long time that their personal information will not be available to advertisers," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center.

Clearly their personal information is available to someone paying big bucks. Billions of bucks.
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SamEllison
I feel so clean!
01:38 PM on 10/19/2010
Ivan, do you know what an IPO is?
How bout selling shares of stock?
Once you start trading and selling shares you have to follow rules.
12:50 PM on 10/19/2010
Unlikely that growth will stop despite privacy concerns..will the millions of farmville users really stop playing?
Here's a CBS story where Katie Linendoll discusses the implications of the latest round of the Facebook privacy debate..
http://www.frequency.com/video/facebook/389176?embed=true
12:43 PM on 10/19/2010
perverse
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevRock
12:40 PM on 10/19/2010
Unreal. With all the MAJOR problems we have going on in this country, THIS is what these corrupt, do-nothing criminals in Washington are worried about. Way to go, guys. Way to go.
12:39 PM on 10/19/2010
Which is precisely why I don't belong to ANY of these social sites.
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12:54 PM on 10/19/2010
exactly...nothing more than a data mining op.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MamandesFilles
VinoVerve.com Editor, Mom, Nerd, Wino
12:38 PM on 10/19/2010
Call me crazy but I would prefer they figure out the robo-foreclosures and foreign money into our elections before they get to Facebook. At my house, we call it priorities.
12:49 PM on 10/19/2010
Keep in mind, many things are addressed simultaneously and approaching the Facebook privacy issue doesn't exclude other issues being addressed (i.e., robo-foreclosures and many other things).
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01:20 PM on 10/19/2010
Yet with all the multi tasking capacity.

There is no budget passed this year.

There are no appropriations passed this year.