Over the weekend, Facebook revealed it had partnerships with 52 organizations that shared data of users of the service, possibly without their consent.
Facebook unveiled the partnerships in an 700 page manifesto at the Congressional Energy and Commerce Committee. Some of the partnerships had already been unveiled last month (Apple, Amazon, Samsung and other device manufacturers).
For these cases, Facebook announced that making data available to device manufacturers was the only way for them users of mobile phones to have the best Facebook experience.
But some of the companies included in the list released on Friday are a little difficult to explain.
For example, according with Politico, the Huawei and Alibaba are in the same list. We mention Alibaba because it is a purely commercial company, looking for listings online customers, with metadata showing their preferences.
Facebook announced that it had terminated any partnership with 38 from 52 companies but did not specify whether it did before or after 2015 when it applied the new regulations allegedly designed to prevent third parties from accessing user data.
So, according to what the largest social network claims, there are 14 companies with which the largest social network is still working.
The question is why after the Cambridge Analytica scandal, does the distribution or sale of data not immediately stop?
Σύμφωνα με το Facebook οι εταιρείες αυτές θεωρούνται "ασφαλείς". Έτσι όπως φαίνεται η εταιρεία διαθέτει κάποιο μέτρο εμπιστευτικότητας για εταιρείες όπως το ίδρυμα Mozilla, την Opera, ή ακόμα για την Vodafone ή η Nokia, που δεν τις συγκρίνει καθόλου με την Cambridge Analytica.
Those who have insomnia can read 700 pages from here (PDF)
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