Facebook Changes Warrant Fed Probe, Privacy Experts Say

A group of privacy and consumer organizations called on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Facebook for recent changes that they say could endanger citizensโ€™ privacy and violate federal privacy laws. In a letter from the Electronic Privacy Information Center and nine other groups, advocates warned that Facebookโ€™s new policies threaten to share too much personal information with advertisers.

The new features offer a โ€œtreasure trove of personal information can also provide a tempting target for stalkers, government agents, or employers,โ€ according to the letter.

Privacy advocates are concerned about new tools on Facebook called โ€œNews Feed,โ€ โ€œTickerโ€ and โ€œOpen Graph,โ€ which together share more information about what users and their friends are doing online. The tools are part of Facebookโ€™s effort to allow โ€œfrictionless sharing,โ€ which allows friends (plus Facebookโ€™s advertisers and business partners) to see information about what users are doing online without the users themselves consciously clicking a button to share that information with others.

[Article: FTC โ€œDo Not Trackโ€ Proposal: Q&A With A Privacy Advocate]

โ€œThese changes in business practices give the company far greater ability to disclose the personal information of its users to its business partners than in the past,โ€ according to the letter signed by Marc Rotenberg, executive director of EPIC, and nine other groups. โ€œOptions for users to preserve the privacy standards they have established have become confusing, impractical, and unfair.โ€

Facebook says that its new sharing tools are actually easy to understand, and simple to disable if they choose.

โ€œSome groups believe people shouldnโ€™t have the option to easily share the songs they are listening to or other content with their friends,โ€ the company said in a prepared statement emailed to Credit.com. โ€œWe couldnโ€™t disagree moreโ€ฆ.โ€

Meanwhile, last week Australian blogger Nik Cubrilovic accused Facebook of tracking usersโ€™ online activities even when theyโ€™re logged out of the website. That gives Facebook new power to track people without their knowledge or consent, Marc Rotenberg, executive director of EPIC, wrote in the letter.

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In its response to Cubrilovic, Facebook said that while some of its cookies do track users after they logout, they are intended to block other people from breaking into usersโ€™ accounts. Some of those cookies gathered data about the users, but Facebook did not collect that data, and it has since stopped collecting the information altogether, Facebook told Cubrilovic.

โ€œThere was no security or privacy breachโ€”Facebook did not store or use any information it should not have,โ€ the company said. Facebook thanked Cubrilovic for alerting it to bugs in its system that collected unique information about users, and pointed to its ongoing communications with bloggers and its program to pay bounties to people who find bugs in its network as evidence that it cares about privacy.

But even if Facebook did fix that problem, Rotenberg wrote in his letter, they companyโ€™s overall strategy appears to be focused on gathering more and more information about its users in ways that sacrifice privacy. โ€œAs with past changes, Facebookโ€™s new changes all point squarely in the direction of decreased consumer privacy, encouraging the sharing of increasing amounts of personal information,โ€ according to the letter from consumer advocates.

The FTC has not announced whether it will investigate the company.

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Image: Skander, via Flickr.com

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