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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg pictured during the week. Niall Carson/PA Wire/PA Images

Facebook warned that new privacy rules could aid terrorism and child abuse

The social media network has been dogged by several privacy scandals in recent years.

THE UNITED STATES, Britain and Australia have called on Facebook to give authorities the ability to circumvent encryption used in its messaging services — a measure opposed by the social media giant.

Facebook has been dogged by several privacy scandals in recent years and has pledged to boost user protections by rolling out end-to-end encryption across all of its social media platforms.

But that plan risks weakening the ability of law enforcement to detect criminal acts including terrorism and the sharing of child sexual abuse images, according to a joint letter signed by US Attorney General William Barr, British Home Secretary Priti Patel and Australian Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton.

“Facebook has not committed to address our serious concerns about the impact its proposals could have on protecting our most vulnerable citizens,” said the letter, addressed to company chief Mark Zuckerberg and seen by AFP.

The company already encrypts WhatsApp messages from end-to-end — meaning only the sender and recipient can read the message — and is working to extend the technology to other apps in its family, including Messenger and Instagram.

Facebook says it is intent on introducing the service without granting oversight to law enforcement agencies.

“We strongly oppose government attempts to build backdoors because they would undermine the privacy and security of people everywhere,” a Facebook spokesperson said.

Zuckerberg said users want encryption, adding that patterns of behavior and connections between accounts could be used to detect illicit behavior even if authorities could not see data in private messages.

Striking a balance 

During a livestreamed question and answer session with employees, Zuckerberg said Facebook would continue to work with authorities to strike a balance between privacy concerns and fighting crimes such as child exploitation and terrorism.

“Having the availability to look at the content is a useful signal, and when you lose that you are fighting that battle with at least a hand tied behind your back and you hope there is a lot of good stuff you can do with your other hand,” Zuckerberg said.

But he added that encryption had many positive benefits such as protection for journalists and political protesters. Rights groups agreed.

“These technologies protect billions of communications every day, from the sensitive correspondence of victims of domestic violence to businesses’ financial records to our private medical information,” Hannah Quay-de la Vallee, senior technologist at the Washington-based nonprofit Center for Democracy and Technology, said. 

Surveillance whistleblower Edward Snowden also criticised the US request to Facebook.

“The government is demanding backdoor access to the private communications of 1.5 billion people using WhatsApp,” Snowden tweeted.

“If Facebook agrees, it may be the largest overnight violation of privacy in history.”

Privacy woes 

Facebook’s efforts to bolster user privacy come after a number of damaging scandals.

In July, the US Federal Trade Commission hit the company with a record $5 billion (about €4.5 billion) fine for data protection violations in a wide-ranging settlement that calls for revamping privacy controls and oversight at the social network.

The FTC concluded that Facebook had violated a 2011 pledge to protect user data in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica affair, when a political consultancy gained access to the data of nearly 90 million users and used it to target voters.

The same consultancy worked on both the Leave campaign in Britain’s Brexit referendum of 2016 and on US President Donald Trump’s election campaign in the same year.

In the company’s latest privacy lapse, phone numbers linked to more than 400 million Facebook accounts were last month listed online on an exposed server that was not password protected.

Data sharing 

Yesterday’s request comes soon after the signing of the CLOUD Act Agreement, which will allow British and US law enforcement agencies to demand electronic data regarding serious crimes directly from tech companies based in the other country.

The agreement will allow “more efficient and effective access to data needed for quick-moving investigations”, Barr said in the statement.

Facebook interpreted the CLOUD Act to allow technology companies to enable users to have private online conversations and be required to provide available information to valid legal requests — not build backdoors into encrypted systems.

© AFP 2019  

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    Mute Phil O' Meara
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:36 AM

    Hmm. I think the character limit was one of the only forms of discipline applied across all of social media and made people think a little harder about what they actually wanted to say.

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    Mute Preston Fairclough
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:54 AM

    @Phil O’ Meara: (1/39)

    53
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    Mute Niall Conran
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    Sep 27th 2017, 9:45 AM

    @Preston Fairclough: That same joke is literally in the article above

    12
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    Mute Maurice Frazer
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    Sep 27th 2017, 12:29 PM

    @Phil O’ Meara: Donald Trump??

    1
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    Mute gjpb
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:51 AM

    Imagine the twitter outrage now.

    It will be non stop ranting…

    30
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    Mute James O'Brien
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:11 AM

    All people want is an edit option. Been requested for years and ignored.

    22
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    Mute mcgoo
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    Sep 27th 2017, 1:47 PM

    @James O’Brien: totally right. How often have I face palmed and then deleted.

    2
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    Mute Fiona deFreyne
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:49 AM

    Just in time for Trump the Magnificent to give further vent to his great magnificence at a crucial time. Let the insults fly.

    Fewer characters, less damage.

    21
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    Mute Chad Rockett
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:58 AM

    @Fiona deFreyne: Agreed. Only people with the correct opinions should be allowed use 280 characters.

    16
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    Mute Preston Fairclough
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:13 AM

    @Fiona deFreyne: “Trump the Magnificent”…I like it! Kudos

    7
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    Mute dick dastardly
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:44 AM

    I think twitter has missed the boat.instagram seems to be picking up what twitter should of been

    16
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    Mute Preston Fairclough
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:53 AM

    @dick dastardly: they’re two infinitely different platforms.

    31
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    Mute Joey Navinski
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:09 AM

    @Preston Fairclough: On both platforms you can post comments, photos, video and links to followers and non-followers alike. I’m curious what makes them infinitely different?

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    Mute Preston Fairclough
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:12 AM

    @Joey Navinski: not many twitter people sharing photos of their avocado on toast.

    14
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    Mute DarkHorse
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    Sep 27th 2017, 10:11 AM

    @dick dastardly:

    Instagram is for vapid narcissists

    Twitter is for pseudo intellectuals

    17
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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Sep 27th 2017, 6:17 PM

    @DarkHorse: You forgot people who “want to win a freebie from company XYZ” and people who didn’t see any Gmail option to register to comment here. But okay. Is your dog called Mutley btw?

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    Mute Brianán McBride
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:57 AM

    Trump will be happy, this is going to be fun.

    10
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    Mute Mike
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:09 AM

    Quite a lot of outrage from far left organisations as it gives “more free speech”. I think “Women’s March” on twitter were saying it was bad because it gave white supremacists twice the space to be racist. Personally I like the 140 characters as it helps make people’s thinking concise. But then people get around that with threads and images of text.

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    Mute Eamonn Sheen
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:30 AM

    @Mike: They have little to be outraged by.

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    Mute Micheal S. O' Ceilleachair
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:33 AM

    Trump will be thrilled, he can now write an essay!!!!

    9
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    Mute Awkward Seal
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:28 AM

    I can speak Japanese (20 characters)

    日本語が話せます (8 characters)

    I never thought of that before. 140 characters led to the worst kind of ba$tardised English. I’m enjoying Twitter’s slow death and I don’t think this will save it. It’s amusing how desperate they are. The writings on the wall.

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    Mute Joe Brennan
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    Sep 27th 2017, 9:28 AM

    @Awkward Seal: But they are double-byte characters, so computers interpret that to be 16 characters.

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    Mute Deborah Behan
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    Sep 27th 2017, 7:50 AM

    My attention span is little I will probably scroll past the longer tweets!

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    Mute Cicero
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    Sep 27th 2017, 9:05 AM

    To think they have had countless meetings since this heresy was first suggested. Bet there was a task force setup, a market research group was probably engaged, legal non disclosure agreements were probably signed, marketing promotional material was branded and stockpiled, counsellors were probably on retainer.
    Then the big reveal… the moment twitter found a solution to the problem of its very existence…allow longer tweets. #GameChanger.

    It is a bit full of its own opinion of itself.

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    Mute DeFonz
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    Sep 27th 2017, 12:21 PM

    They will be rambling like we do here..

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    Mute Brian O Reilly
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    Sep 27th 2017, 8:25 AM

    No.if you can’t get your point across in 140 characters ,then you’ve lost them.

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    Mute purple rain
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    Sep 27th 2017, 11:52 AM

    You can imagine how that meeting went. Any ideas? Hmm 50 words . Next lad, 60.

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    Mute John B
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    Sep 27th 2017, 11:50 AM

    MySpace, Bebo, yahoo, ……twitter

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    Mute Darren Moore
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    Sep 27th 2017, 4:32 PM

    Stop ….stop…. it’s already dead …

    1
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