Facebook CEO backed sharing customer data despite second
thoughts: documents
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[December 06, 2018]
By Paresh Dave
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Facebook Chief
Executive Mark Zuckerberg questioned the business case for giving
millions of outside software developers wide access to customer data
before endorsing the practice in 2012, according to internal emails
published on Wednesday.
The decision made it possible for a quiz app to gather data on about 87
million Facebook users the following year, and later share the
information with the now-defunct British political consulting firm
Cambridge Analytica, which worked on Donald Trumps' presidential
campaign.
Zuckerberg lamented his choice in a Facebook post on Wednesday, saying
that cracking down a year earlier could have helped the company avoid a
privacy scandal that has tarred its reputation.
The CEO's 2012 emails, obtained by a British government panel
investigating Facebook, provide an unusual window into the internal
deliberations over the critical strategic question of how much customer
data the social network should share.
Facebook had recently gone public and was counting on third-party apps
such as games to help drive growth.
But Zuckerberg questioned whether such apps and the data they sent back
to Facebook were producing sufficient increases in usage and revenue.
"In theory, we want information, but are the posts developers are giving
us actually valuable?" Zuckerberg wrote in response to a lengthy email
from a lieutenant. "They don't seem to be for targeting (content) and I
doubt they drive meaningful increases in engagement either."
A proposed alternative was charging apps for access to Facebook user
data, though such a move would have likely limited the number of apps
that worked with Facebook, Zuckerberg wrote in one message.
Facebook stayed the course, with Zuckerberg rejecting fees in late 2012.
"The purpose of the platform is to tie the universe of all the social
apps together so we can enable a lot more sharing and still remain the
central hub," he said in an email to several top executives. "This finds
the right balance between ubiquity, reciprocity and profit."
By 2014, Facebook had moved to restrict the free promotion and wide data
access from which outside developers benefited. Though the tools and
data remained free, they became less valuable to many app makers.
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Facebook's founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks at the Viva Tech
start-up and technology summit in Paris, France, May 24, 2018.
REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File Photo
Facebook did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
SHIFTING GEARS
The deliberations in the late 2012 emails focused on profit rather than privacy.
Zuckerberg and senior leaders debated how data-exchange deals with companies
like Spotify and Pinterest could generate revenue, believing that Facebook was
getting less benefit from the arrangement than its partners.
Zuckerberg loosely proposed the idea of charging apps 10 cents for every user
data request, a fee he estimated would cost Spotify and Pinterest about $3
million annually, according to one email.
In another thread, he and Sam Lessin, a director of product management, weighed
the consequences.
Facebook had "maximized profit" from games integrating with Facebook by charging
them a fee, Zuckerberg said.
But charging had led the best games to abandon Facebook's services, Lessin said,
and he was "not proud" of those that remained. Lessin did not respond to a
request to comment.
Ultimately, Zuckerberg in the emails stuck with the goal he had set when
launching the developer tools years earlier: Get people to share more items on
Facebook.
In its IPO filing, the company said working with other apps was "key" to
increasing usage of Facebook and had improved its ability to personalize news
feeds.
If Facebook made it easy for more apps to integrate social features, Zuckerberg
wrote months later, "we should be able to unlock more sharing in the world and
on Facebook."
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Neil Fullick)
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