Facebook's hidden data haul troubles
German cartel regulator
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[April 23, 2018]
By Douglas Busvine
BONN, Germany (Reuters) - That the personal
data of tens of millions of Facebook <FB.O> users fell into the wrong
hands is troubling politicians, but Germany's top competition regulator
is questioning the sheer volume of information that the social network
harvests.
Andreas Mundt, president of the Federal Cartel Office, is awaiting
Facebook's response to his findings, published in December, that it
abuses its market dominance by gathering data on people without their
proper consent.
That includes tracking visitors to websites with an embedded Facebook
'like' or share button - and pages where it observes people even though
there is no obvious sign the social network is present.
Mundt's inquiry has gained new relevance since revelations that the data
of 87 million Facebook users, gathered via an online personality quiz,
was passed to Cambridge Analytica, a consultancy that advised Donald
Trump's presidential campaign.
"For Facebook to collect data when I as a user am on Facebook, that's
clear. The user knows this and has to expect it," Mundt told Reuters in
an interview.
"What is problematic is the collection of data in places and moments
where the user can't realistically expect that data is collected by
Facebook."
CEO Mark Zuckerberg, in testimony before the U.S. Congress, said
Facebook tracked people whether they have accounts or not - something
the firm said was "fundamental to how the internet works".
Facebook tracks an estimated 28.6 percent of web traffic across 59.5
percent of internet sites, making it the world's fifth most prevalent
behind several Google <GOOGL.O> properties, according to WhoTracks.me.
NOT POPULAR, BUT DOMINANT
Mundt's case rests on his analysis that Facebook has a market share of
social media in Germany of over 90 percent - he sees its only direct
competitor as Google+ - making it dominant in anti-trust terms and not,
as Facebook argues, merely popular.
"If Facebook has a dominant market position, then the consent that the
user gives for his data to be used is no longer voluntary," said Mundt,
57, a jurist who has headed the cartel office since 2013.
"That's because he has no alternative - he has to use Facebook if he
wants to use a social network."
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Andreas Mundt, president of Germany's Federal Cartel Office, is
pictured during an interview with Reuters in Bonn, Germany April 17,
2018. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
Facebook, which has more than 2 billion users worldwide, describes
Mundt's view as "inaccurate" but has said it will cooperate with the
investigation, which would not result in fines but could lead to
some practices being banned.
It is due to submit its response to Mundt's findings soon. This will
then lead to a dialogue on whether Facebook should change its
practices voluntarily or, possibly, be ordered to do so.
Separately, the data protection commissioner for Hamburg, the
city-state where Facebook has its German office, has launched a
non-compliance procedure after being dissatisfied by the firm's
explanation over the Cambridge Analytica leak.
The scrutiny from German regulators enjoys the backing of lawmakers,
reflecting broader hostility toward anything resembling surveillance
that goes back to Germany's history of Nazi and Communist rule in
the 20th century.
Mundt pushed back against suggestions that, in taking on the case,
he was encroaching on the domain of data protection authorities. He
said there was a solid precedent in Germany for inappropriate terms
of use to be treated as an anti-trust issue.
"The competitive connection is particularly strong from our point of
view, because data are intrinsic to the business model," he said.
"The entire business model relies ultimately on access to data and
the reach of these platforms," he said. "With the Facebook probe we
are doing pioneering work - but in no way is this an experiment."
(Reporting by Douglas Busvine; Editing by Keith Weir)
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