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Home Front: Culture Wars
It's Time To Rein In Big Tech
2019-09-21
Before Facebook there was FaceMash. Mark Zuckerberg founded FaceMash in his Harvard dorm room in 2003 and Facebook a year later. According to the Harvard Crimson, FaceMash used "photos compiled from the online facebooks of nine [Harvard] Houses, placing two next to each other at a time and asking users to choose the "hotter" person. Having gone viral (at least by 2003 standards), the Harvard authorities stepped in, shut FaceMash down and charged Zuckerberg with breach of security, violating copyright, and violating individual privacy. The charges were later dropped.

Mark Zuckerberg remains proud of his hacker roots to this day.

Even now, Facebook’s campus is located at One Hacker Way. Zuckerberg may not run from these hacker roots, but what of the data privacy and security charges Harvard levied against him? Well, it seems that not much has changed in this regard wither. In November 2018, Facebook revealed that it had exposed photos belonging to 6.8 million consumers to third party app developers without permission. The next month, The New York Times revealed that Facebook had continued to share troves of personal information with some of the world’s largest corporations long after it had sworn to cut off access to the data. These are but two recent examples of Facebook’s difficult relationship with user privacy.

Facebook is not alone among its peer companies, but it is the poster child for Big Tech’s attitude toward privacy. Eric Schmidt of Google has displayed equal disdain for privacy in his public remarks, once famously boasting "We know where you are. We know where you've been. We can more or less know what you're thinking about." Sit on that one for a minute.

Having taken a hands off approach for years, there is a growing consensus among lawmakers that Big Tech must be reined in. But how? Most lawmakers now recognize that the nation’s privacy laws need to be modernized. Efforts are currently underway in the Senate Commerce Committee to craft legislation that would create a ’one-size-fits-all’ federal privacy standard for businesses, large and small.

Beyond privacy, a smaller group of lawmakers is calling for the break-up of internet platforms under the antitrust laws. Last week, a precedent setting 48 states announced an investigation into Google and the week before a smaller group announced an investigation into Facebook. These investigations will take time, years even, and it may be challenging to build a case against Big Tech under current antitrust case law, but it’s a start.
Posted by:g(r)omgoru

#5  #1 Mark Zuckerberg said he would 'cooperate' with congressional antitrust investigation into Facebook as he faced legislators behind closed doors and was also quizzed on privacy and election security

...And by 'cooperate', he means asking, "How many zeroes on the check, Senator?"

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2019-09-21 12:38  

#4  I believe that as part of the terms of use Facebook gets an non exclusive license to redistribute anything uploaded to it as it sees fit with no notice required.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2019-09-21 08:40  

#3  Break them up.

Force FB to disgorge WhatsApp and Instagram.

Force Google to disgorge DoubleClick and YouTube, and require DoubleClick Bid Manager to expose the bids to advertisers just as NASDAQ or the NYSE expose the bid/ask spread to trading firms.

Break them up.
Posted by: Lex   2019-09-21 08:13  

#2  Facebook has suspended tens of thousands of apps after discovering they were 'inappropriately' collecting and sharing user data
Posted by: Skidmark   2019-09-21 05:29  

#1  Mark Zuckerberg said he would 'cooperate' with congressional antitrust investigation into Facebook as he faced legislators behind closed doors and was also quizzed on privacy and election security
Posted by: Skidmark   2019-09-21 05:28  

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