How Facebook made its Cambridge Analytica data crisis even worse - Zobgymarku Blog

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Monday 23 July 2018

How Facebook made its Cambridge Analytica data crisis even worse

questions about Facebook's ability to cope with the Cambridge Analytica crisis will undoubtedly persist.


Facebook tried to get ahead of its latest media firestorm. Instead, it helped create one.

The company knew ahead of time that the New York Times and The Guardian's Observer would issue bombshell reports that the data firm that helped Donald Trump win the presidency had accessed and retained information on 50 million Facebook users without their permission.

Facebook did two things to protect itself: it sent letters to the media firms laying out its legal case for why this data leak didn't constitute a "breach." And then it scooped the reports using their information, with a blog post on why it was suspending the ad firm, Cambridge Analytica, from its site.


Both moves backfired.



On Saturday, Facebook said it "received reports" that Cambridge Analytica hadn't deleted the user data, and that it needed to suspend the firm. The statement gave the impression that Facebook had looked into the matter.

In fact, the company's decisions were stemming from information in the news reports set to publish the next day, and it had not independently verified those reports, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. By trying to look proactive, Facebook ended up adding weight to the news.

On Sunday, any good will the company earned by talking about the problem first was quickly undone when reporters revealed Facebook's behind-the-scenes legal maneuvering.


"Yesterday Facebook threatened to sue us. Today we publish this," Carole Cadwalladr, the Observer reporter, wrote as she linked her story to Twitter, in a post shared almost 15,000 times. The Guardian said it had nothing to add to her statement.

Front-running the stories along with the letters to newsrooms are but two of several ways Facebook failed to contain fallout from the Cambridge Analytica revelations.

Silence on the part of chief executive Mark Zuckerberg and chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg didn't help.



Nor did a report on Tuesday in the New York Times that chief security officer Alex Stamos is leaving after clashing with other executives, including Sandberg, over how Facebook handled Russian disinformation campaigns. Facebook said Stamos is still at the company, but didn't outright deny that he plans to leave.

"Most of its executives haven't done a real interview in ages, let alone answer deep questions," Zeynep Tufecki, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina who specialises in social networks and democracy, wrote in a post on Twitter.

In a sign of investor dismay, Facebook shares tumbled 6.8 per cent on Tuesday, the biggest decline since March 2014.

As the stock fell and criticism from lawmakers poured in from the US and Britain, the company worked to make it clear that it didn't actually have enough information, on its own, to react to news reports in a stronger way.


Facebook put out another blog post, saying that Cambridge Analytica and the researcher who provided them the data, Aleksandr Kogan, had agreed to a digital forensics audit to prove they deleted it.

Facebook said the one person who didn't agree to the audit was Christopher Wylie, the former Cambridge Analytica contractor who spoke to the newspapers about the data leak. With the post, Facebook aimed to stir more skepticism around Wylie's information, according to a person familiar with the matter.

That didn't resolve things quickly either. The auditors were already on site at Cambridge Analytica's London office on Tuesday when they had to pause their work. The UK Information Commissioner's Office is pursuing a warrant to conduct its own on-site investigation.

The Cambridge Analytica saga is the latest in a series of bungled Facebook responses, often reactionary and sometimes unintentionally stirring public outrage instead of resolving concerns.


The company's interaction with the public tends to start with a carefully crafted blog post, and then evolve into a much more improvised Twitter-based conversation with lower-level executives who defend the social network and explain its decisions. It doesn't always go well.

Meanwhile, higher ranking executives remain quiet. Zuckerberg and Sandberg, who in past years would post frequently about the issues of the day, have shied away from reacting to the most controversial news.

Politicians have now called out Zuckerberg by name in both the US and the UK.

Zuckerberg and Sandberg plan to remain quiet on the Cambridge Analytica situation until the company completes its internal review of what happened, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Until they do, questions about Facebook's ability to cope with the Cambridge Analytica crisis will undoubtedly persist.

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