Calls for Mark Zuckerberg's Removal From Facebook as Mass User Spying Exposed Company caught selling secret contracts giving access to users' private calls
By: Jay Greenberg
Ddocuments reveal mark zuckerberg s facebook sold access to users private calls © press
Documents reveal Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook sold access to users' private
calls actress total restore Facebook executives and shareholders are
calling for founder Mark Zuckerberg to be removed as CEO as documents
emerge that show the company sold direct access to users' personal data,
allowing brands to spy on private phone calls and texts. The practices
were exposed late on Wednesday when British MPs revealed documents
containing emails and memos between staff as part of the ongoing
investigation into election interference by the social media giant. The
documents have exposed social network for secretly selling direct access
to users' devices through apps, allowing third parties to spy on users'
calls and texts, outside of Facebook, and without the person's consent or
knowledge. The 250-page report was published by MP Damian Collins who is
leading the UK investigation into the spread of fake news and propaganda
from foreign entities on the platform. The document contains private
messages and secret emails between Facebook staff, including Mr.
Zuckerberg. The communications revealed that Facebook signed backdoor
deals to give companies such as Netflix and AirBnB special access to user
dater and allowed them to spy on Android users' phone calls and text
messages. Have your say - ⇓ Hit the comments below ⇓ Former workers have
been speaking out to describe a "toxic and hostile" atmosphere at the
Internet juggernaut, which has been battling scandal after scandal
recently, as mass user data misuse and politically biased censorship
policies have been exposed. Speaking to Buzzfeed News, a former senior
employee said that workers are desperate for a change of leadership.
"People are hoping for a Sundar or Dara moment," the worker said referring
to Google's chief Sundar Pichai and Uber's new boss Dara Khosrowshahi.
TRENDING: Illegal Immigrants Seek Asylum at Pelosi Home She Has Police
Remove Them Another senior staff member said employees fear being scolded
by enraged bosses who are "spouting full-blown anti-media rhetoric, saying
that the press is ganging up on Facebook." The source revealed how staff
are turning on the firm from within, saying: "People now have burner
phones to talk sh*t about the company - not even to reporters, just to
other employees." Sources say staff are at rock bottom, adding: "It's the
bunker mentality. "These people have been under siege for 600 days now.
"They're getting tired, getting cranky - the only survival strategy is to
quit or fully buy in." facebook executives want mark zuckerberg out
following scandal after scandal © press Facebook executives want Mark
Zuckerberg out following scandal after scandal According to the Daily
Mail, a Facebook spokesman last night admitted: "This a challenging time."
The reports pile even more pressure on Mr. Zuckerberg as MP Collins
published the 250-page document containing secret communications between
Facebook staff. Facebook stock has plunged in recent months and is set to
take a beating when the New York Stock Exchange opens Thursday morning
after a hiatus for George H.W. Bush's funeral. Mr. Collins used
parliamentary privilege to seize the documents - which had been made
secret by a US judge - from the founder of US app developer Six4Three, Ted
Kramer, who had them as part of a legal case against Facebook. In an
extraordinary move when Mr. Kramer was passing through London in November,
Mr. Collins had him escorted to Parliament and threatened to imprison him
if he didn't hand them over. The documents reveal: Facebook programmed its
Android app to see users call and text records in which it admitted was a
'pretty high-risk thing to do from a PR perspective' Facebook aggressively
stopped rivals from accessing its users' data to maintain dominance,
causing many apps to fail CEO Mark Zuckerberg personally approved a
decision to block Twitter's app Vine from accessing users' Facebook
friends lists Mr. Zuckerberg said he was 'skeptical' that apps with access
Facebook users' data would pass data on, as then happened in the Cambridge
Analytica scandal Facebook used Onavo app it acquired to spy on users'
phone usage, apparently without their knowledge, to identify competitors
such as Whatsapp to buy out The messages discuss changes that Facebook
made to its site in 2015 which limited apps' access to users' Facebook
friends. The app ThisIsYourDigitalLife exploited this feature to get
information from millions of Facebook profiles despite only having around
300,000 direct users, which it later sold to political consulting firm
Cambridge Analytica. mark zuckerberg refused to meet with british mps
saying he s already addressed congress © press Mark Zuckerberg refused to
meet with British MPs saying he's already addressed Congress In emails
sent ahead of the changes being implemented, Facebook senior staff
discussed "whitelisting" several apps - including Lyft, Tinder, and AirBnB
- meaning they would keep full access to friend data. One employee
proposed only letting companies who pay a certain amount have access.
Konstantinos Papamiltidas, Facebook's director of platform partnerships,
said: "Communicate in one-go to all apps that don't spend that those
permission[s] will be revoked. "Communicate to the rest that they need to
spend on NEKO [a platform that Facebook uses to sell advertising] $250k a
year to maintain access to the data." Facebook strongly denied ever
selling user data and insisted it only granted these companies "short-term
extensions" to preserve user experience. In another email from Mark
Zuckerberg himself, sent in 2012, he lays out his vision for how Facebook
will generate money in the future, including leveraging developers for
access to data. the 250 page report was published by mp damian collins who
is leading the uk investigation into facebook © press The 250-page report
was published by MP Damian Collins who is leading the UK investigation
into Facebook He writes: "I'm getting more on board with locking down some
parts of short-term platform, including friends data and potentially email
addresses for mobile apps. "Without limiting distribution or access to
friends who use this app, I don't think we have any way to get developers
to pay us at all..." In another email, sent around the same time, he
discusses charging developers a fee for accessing user data - which he
says should "cost a lot of money" - which they can repay to Facebook by
buying their advertising or using their payments service. He writes: "A
basic model could be: Login with Facebook is always free, pushing content
to Facebook is Airbnb free, reading anything, including friends, costs a
lot of money. "Perhaps on the order of $0.10/user each year. "For the
money that you owe, you can cover it in any of the following ways:
Buy[ing] ads from us in neko or another system. "Run our ads in your app
or website (canvas apps already do this). "Use our payments. Sell your
items in our Karma store. "Or if the revenue we get from those doesn't add
up to more that the fees you owe us, then you just pay us the fee
directly." Mr. Collins, the chairman of Parliament's Digital, Culture,
Media and Sport Committee, said: "Facebook have clearly entered into
whitelisting agreements with certain companies, which meant that after the
platform changes in 2014/15 they maintained full access to friends data.
"It is not clear that there was any user consent for this, nor how
Facebook decided which companies should be whitelisted or not. "It is
clear that increasing revenues from major app developers was one of the
key drivers behind the... changes at Facebook. "The idea of linking access
to friends data to the financial value of the developers relationship with
Facebook is a recurring feature of the documents." Defending his decision
to publish the papers, which contravenes a California judge who ruled they
should remain a secret, he added that there was a "considerable public
interest." He said Facebook had failed to give "straight answers" to his
inquiry after Mark Zuckerberg failed to show up to a grand committee
featuring politicians from eight countries last week. mark zuckerberg was
empty chaired by the grand committee last week after sending executive
richard allan in his place © press Mark Zuckerberg was 'empty chaired' by
the grand committee last week after sending executive Richard Allan in his
place The dossier includes emails written by Mr. Zuckerberg himself, as
well as hundreds of documents about privileged access to data given by
Facebook to certain applications. Mr. Collins said: "I believe there is
considerable public interest in releasing these documents. "They raise
important questions about how Facebook treats users data, their policies
for working with app developers, and how they exercise their dominant
position in the social media market. "We don't feel we have had straight
answers from Facebook on these important issues, which is why we are
releasing the documents. "We need a more public debate about the rights of
social media users and the smaller businesses who are required to work
with the tech giants. "I hope that our committee investigation can stand
up for them." The leak relates to a court case between Facebook, an app
developer called Six4Three and its app Pinkini, which allowed users to
find bikini photos among images uploaded by their friends. The app was
effectively killed when Facebook updated its privacy settings in 2015, and
the company is now suing the social media giant. As part of the legal
proceedings, Six4Three was handed a trove of documents from Facebook
related to its case but was told to keep them private. They were seized by
Collins using an obscure parliamentary rule as a Six4Three executive was
passing through London in November. Reacting to the documents being
published, a Facebook spokesman said: "As we've said many times, the
documents Six4Three gathered for their baseless case are only part of the
story and are presented in a way that is very misleading without
additional context. "We stand by the platform changes we made in 2015 to
stop a person from sharing their friends' data with developers. "Like any
business, we had many of internal conversations about the various ways we
could build a sustainable business model for our platform. "But the facts
are clear: we've never sold people's data." Mr. Zuckerberg was "empty
chaired" by the grand committee last week after sent executive Richard
Allan for the grilling instead. Facebook had demanded the Six4Three papers
published today be handed back without being opened by MPs or published.
Six4Three managing director Ted Kramer gave the documents to British
authorities after being warned he could be banned from leaving the UK if
he refused. facebook executive richard allan has been grilled by world
governments in mark zuckerberg s place © press Facebook executive Richard
Allan has been grilled by world governments in Mark Zuckerberg's place In
an extraordinary sequence of events, he ignored three demands for the
emails before being personally served by a Serjeant at Arms and meeting
Mr. Collins in his Commons office. MPs drew up the "unprecedented" order
to seize the documents after discovering that Mr. Kramer was due to visit
the UK. Mr. Kramer has claimed in court documents he "panicked" while in
the meeting with Mr. Collins and his staff, meaning he copied documents
from his cloud storage and onto a USB stick. But after seizing the
documents, Mr. Collins said: "Under UK law and parliamentary privilege we
can publish papers if we choose to. "As you know we have asked many
questions of Facebook about its policies on sharing user data. "I believe
these documents may contain important information." In a statement issued
after the committee hearing today, Facebook said of the claim that an
engineer had flagged concerns about Russians trawling the site for data:
"The engineers who had flagged these initial concerns subsequently looked
into this further and found no evidence of specific Russian activity."
Lord Allan has also urged Mr. Collins not to reveal the documents. He
warned Collins yesterday in an email that the documents are "sub judice
before a court in California" and are "sealed." Lord Allan is a Liberal
Democrat peer and unlike previous Facebook witnesses at the House of
Commons is an expert in Parliament's procedures. A US judge in California
had ordered the files, obtained from Facebook via a legal discovery
process, could not be revealed to the public earlier this year. Mr.
Zuckerberg has repeatedly refused to attend the UK Parliament saying that
he has already testified to Congress in the US and before the European
Union. "It is not possible for Mr. Zuckerberg to be available to all
parliaments," the firm said. Facebook said after the documents were
seized: "The materials obtained by the DCMS committee are subject to a
protective order of the San Mateo Superior Court restricting their
disclosure. "We have asked the DCMS committee to refrain from reviewing
them and to return them to counsel or to Facebook. "We have no further
comment." facebook sold direct access to users calls and texts to anyone
willing to pay © press Facebook sold direct access to users calls and
texts to anyone willing to pay What do the Facebook emails say? 1.
Facebook planned to let its android app read users' call records in which
it admitted was a "pretty high-risk thing to do from a PR perspective."
Michael LeBeau (Facebook product manager) wrote on 4 February 2015: "As
you know all the growth team is planning on shipping a permissions update
on Android at the end of this month. "They are going to include the 'read
call log' permission... "This is a pretty high-risk thing to do from a PR
perspective but it appears that the growth team will charge ahead and do
it." 2. Facebook aggressively stopped rivals from accessing its users'
data to maintain dominance, causing many apps to fail. CEO Mark Zuckerberg
personally approved a decision to block Twitter's app Vine from accessing
users' Facebook friends lists. Justin Osofsky (Facebook vice president)
wrote on 24 January 2012: "Twitter launched Vine today which lets you
shoot multiple short video segments to make one single, 6-second video...
"Unless anyone raises objections, we will shut down their friends API
access today. "We've prepared reactive PR, and I will let Jana know our
decision." CEO Mark Zuckerberg replied: "Yup, go for it." 3. Mr.
Zuckerberg said he was "skeptical" that apps with access Facebook users'
data would pass this data on, as then happened in the Cambridge Analytica
scandal in 2016 In a 2012 email to Sam Lessin, the company's former VP of
Project Management, Mr. Zuckerberg wrote: "I'm generally skeptical that
there is as much data leak strategic risk as you think. "I agree there is
clear risk on the advertiser side, but I haven't figured out how that
connects to the rest of the platform. "I think we leak info to developers,
but I just can't think if any instances where that data has leaked from
developer to developer and caused a real issue for us. "Do you have
examples of this?" 4. Facebook executives planned to provide user data to
apps which paid Facebook a certain amount Konstantinos Papamiltidas,
Facebook's director of platform partnerships, ordered: "Communicate to all
apps that don't spend that those permission[s] will be revoked.
"Communicate to the rest that they need to spend on NEKO [a platform that
Facebook uses to sell advertising] $250k a year to maintain access to the
data."
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