Skip to main content

Canada Opens New Facebook Privacy Inquiry

Facebook
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Canada’s privacy commissioner has announced a second investigation into privacy practices at Facebook, focusing on the new privacy tool Facebook rolled out to its hundreds of millions of members back in December 2009. The new policy, which has been derided as sharing all user’s information with everybody all the time, requires users to review their privacy settings and explicitly select what portions of their profiles, posts, and streams are available to other users. However, the default privacy settings for the tool are to share as much information as possible, a stance Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg as described as a new “social norm.”

The new investigation stems from a new public complaint about Facebook’s privacy practices. “The individual’s complaint mirrors some of the concerns that our Office has heard and expressed to Facebook in recent months,” said Assistant Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham, in a statement. “Some Facebook users are disappointed by certain changes being made to the site—changes that were supposed to strengthen their privacy and the protection of their personal information.”

Recommended Videos

Denham lead the original investigation into Facebook’s handling of personal information.

Back in mid-2009, Canada’s privacy commission threatened to take Facebook to court over its privacy practices, saying the social networkign services had “serious gaps” in the way it managed users’ personal information. Facebook’s privacy revamp at the end of 2009 was intended, in part, to address those concerns. In the wake the Canadian privacy commissioner’s initial investigation, Facebook agreed to implement a slate of changes to its site within a year.

In the United States, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has lodged a similar complaint about Facebook’s new privacy practices with the Federal Trade Commission.

Facebook had consistently maintained that any changes to privacy settings recommended by its new privacy tool are repeatedly showed to users, who much explicitly accept those changes.

Topics
Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
A new definition of ‘open source’ could spell trouble for Big AI
Meta AI can generate images within a chat in about five seconds.

The Open Source Initiative (OSI), self-proclaimed steward of the open source definition, the most widely used standard for open-source software, announced an update to what constitutes an "open source AI" on Thursday. The new wording could now exclude models from industry heavyweights like Meta and Google.

"Open Source has demonstrated that massive benefits accrue to everyone after removing the barriers to learning, using, sharing, and improving software systems," the OSI wrote in a recent blog post. "For AI, society needs the same essential freedoms of Open Source to enable AI developers, deployers, and end users to enjoy those same benefits."

Read more
This new Lenovo laptop opens and contorts itself with a voice command
The Lenovo Twisting Auto PC with the display halfway twisted.

You've never seen a laptop like this -- I guarantee it.

At IFA 2024, Lenovo showed off what might be the most fascinating laptop of the year so far -- the Lenovo Auto Twist PC. It's just a proof of concept, but it introduces some really fun ideas into the world of laptops.

Read more
OpenAI defends against Apple Intelligence privacy concerns
OpenAI's Mira Murati introduces GPT-4o.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk took to his X (formerly Twitter) social media platform on Monday to complain about the recently announced integration of OpenAI's ChatGPT into Apple iOS (and more specifically, Siri), maligning the machine learning system as "creepy spyware." During Fortune's MPW dinner Tuesday evening, OpenAI Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati rebutted Musk's allegations.

"That’s his opinion. Obviously I don’t think so," she told the audience. "We care deeply about the privacy of our users and the safety of our products."

Read more