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Facebook Secret Docs Published


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2018 Dec 5, 9:22am   462 views  0 comments

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British Parliament on Wednesday published a cache of secret Facebook documents it obtained last month from a company suing the social network.

A redacted version of the papers was pushed live on the website of the Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport Committee, which is investigating Facebook's privacy standards as part of an inquiry into "disinformation and fake news."

You can view all 250 pages of the Facebook documents right here.

Damian Collins, a Conservative politician who is chair of the committee, prefaced the papers with a summary of what he sees as some of the most explosive revelations. These included:

Facebook entering "whitelisting agreements" that gave companies including Netflix and Airbnb access to friends data after Facebook introduced new privacy policies in 2014-2015.

Collins said a recurring theme of the papers was the "idea of linking access to friends data to the financial value of the [app] developers' relationship with Facebook."
They show Facebook "taking aggressive positions against apps," Collins said. This included email evidence showing that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg personally approved a decision to deny access to data for the now-defunct Twitter video-looping app, Vine.
Facebook made it difficult for users to know about changes it made to its Android app because they were controversial. The changes enabled Facebook to collect a record of calls and texts sent by users.
Collins obtained the documents from Ted Kramer, the founder of a software company called Six4Three, while Kramer was on business in the UK last month.

Six4Three is suing Facebook after its business — specifically, an app named Pikinis that surfaced images of people's Facebook friends in their swimwear — was decimated when the social network tightened up its privacy policies in 2015.

A California court order had placed the documents under seal, but the Digital, Culture, Media, and Sport Committee published them under UK parliamentary privilege, believing them to be in the public interest.

"There is considerable public interest in releasing these documents," he said. "They raise important questions about how Facebook treats users data, their policies for working with app developers, and how they exercise their dominant position in the social media market."

He added: "We don't feel we have had straight answers from Facebook on these important issues, which is why we are releasing the documents."

https://www.businessinsider.com/facebook-documents-six4three-case-published-british-parliament-2018-12
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