From Facebook to creepy online ads, the worst tech of the year made the internet feel like an unsafe place to hang out. Yet there were some products that were fixed, our personal tech critic writes. Personal technology was so awful this year that nobody would think you were paranoid if you dug a hole and buried your computer, phone and smart speaker under six feet of earth. Facebook made headlines week after week for failing to protect our privacy and for spreading misinformation. Juul, the e-cigarette company under investigation for marketing products to teenagers, emerged as the Joe Camel of the digital era. And don’t get me started on just how intrusive online advertising has become. On the other hand, there was good technology this year that improved how we live, like parental controls to curb smartphone addiction and a web browser with built-in privacy protections. For the last two years, I’ve reviewed the tech that needed the most fixing and the tech t...
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
A Hot Seat for Facebook, an Empty Chair for Zuckerberg and a Vow to Share Secret Files
Richard Allan, Facebook’s vice president for policy solutions, attended the session on Tuesday in London in place of Mark Zuckerberg, sitting next to the empty seat left for his boss.CreditAgence France-Presse — Getty Image
Richard Allan, Facebook’s vice president for policy solutions, attended the session on Tuesday in London in place of Mark Zuckerberg, sitting next to the empty seat left for his boss.CreditCreditAgence France-Presse — Getty Images
LONDON — Officials from nine countries examining Facebook’s business practices have spent weeks trying to get the company’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, to face questions at a hearing.
On Tuesday in London, Mr. Zuckerberg was represented by an empty chair.
He skipped the session, which was organized by a British committee investigating Facebook and the spread of misinformation. In Mr. Zuckerberg’s absence, officials spent more than three hours grilling a Facebook executive who stood in for him, criticizing the company’s influence on democracy, its distribution of false news and its use of personal user data.
“You have lost the trust of the international community,” said Charlie Angus, an official representing Canada. He was joined by policymakers from Argentina, Brazil, Ireland, Latvia, Singapore, France, Belgium and Britain.
The hearing was built up by panel members as a moment of international accountability for Facebook. While the panel has no authority to impose laws or fines, it was a rare collaboration to investigate a company that is facing scrutiny after revelations about privacy breaches and its role in spreading propaganda and fomenting ethnic strife.
Advertisement
Anticipation had built in recent days after the British official who called the hearing, Damian Collins, hinted that he might also release secret internal Facebook documents. The documents were originally uncovered during a California lawsuit over data sharing between Facebook and the maker of an app called Six4Three, and are under seal in the United States.
But Mr. Collins did not release the documents on Tuesday, saying he needed more time to go through them.
That left most of the hearing’s spotlight on Richard Allan, Facebook’s vice president for policy solutions, who attended the session in place of Mr. Zuckerberg and who sat next to the empty seat left for his boss.
Mr. Allan, also a member of the British House of Lords, said Facebook accepted a need for new regulation, without specifying which policies it would support.
“We have damaged public trust through some of the actions we’ve taken,” said Mr. Allan, who later repeated variations of the same apology.
He added, “There were things that we missed that we were either not sufficiently focused on or too slow to react to.”
But policymakers at the hearing were less than satisfied. Several brought up Mr. Zuckerberg’s no-show.
Damian Collins, a British policymaker, did not release a cache of internal Facebook documents that he had obtained, saying he needed more time to go through them.CreditFrank Augstein/Associated Press
Damian Collins, a British policymaker, did not release a cache of internal Facebook documents that he had obtained, saying he needed more time to go through them.CreditFrank Augstein/Associated Press
“We don’t have Mr. Zuckerberg here today, which is incredibly unfortunate and I think speaks to a failure to account for the loss of trust certainly across the world,” said Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, another Canadian official.
Others called for tougher regulations, including one member who suggested it was time to break up Facebook, which also owns Instagram and WhatsApp.
Mr. Collins weighed in by referring to information in some of the internal Facebook documents that he obtained, including a 2014 email from a Facebook engineer who had raised questions about access to the platform coming from Russia. The issue is sensitive since Russiaused Facebook to manipulate American voters during the 2016 presidential election.
In a statement on Tuesday, Facebook said that “the engineer who had flagged those initial concerns subsequently looked into this further and found no evidence of specific Russian activity.” Facebook also released the emails.
Advertisement
Other policymakers, alluding to other internal Facebook documents, asked whether the company had ever restricted app developers’ access to user data unless the developer had purchased mobile advertising. The company does not engage in such quid pro quo arrangements, Mr. Allan said.
Mr. Collins said he hoped to release the cache of internal Facebook documents within the “next week or so.” The panel, he added, was still going through the papers to decide what was in the public interest to disclose and what information might need to be redacted to protect personal information.
Mr. Collins has faced questions about the methods he used to obtain the Facebook documents, which he got last week by dispatching Parliament’s sergeant-at-arms to force the founder of Six4Three, Ted Kramer, to share the information while on a business trip to London.
In papers filed on Monday in California, lawyers for Mr. Kramer and Six4Three said Mr. Collins was put in touch with Mr. Kramer by Carole Cadwalladr, a reporter for The Guardian and The Observer.
Both Ms. Cadwalladr and Mr. Collins — at times working in concert — had sought to persuade Mr. Kramer to provide documents under seal in the litigation, in violation of a California court’s order. Mr. Kramer said that Ms. Cadwalladr was the only person he had told where he was staying in London, suggesting she may have alerted Mr. Collins.
Ms. Cadwalladr didn’t respond to requests for comment.
(The Guardian, The Observer and The New York Times collaborated this year on a joint investigation into Cambridge Analytica, the now-defunct political consulting firm; Ms. Cadwalladr was among the reporters who worked on the investigation. The Times is also among several news organizations that have asked the California court to unseal some confidential documents in the Six4Three litigation.)
Mr. Collins defended the committee, saying it has the jurisdiction to get information related to its inquiry on British soil.
Advertisement
While both Parliament and the United States Congress have occasionally used their privileges to publish otherwise confidential materials, legal experts said it was rare — if not unprecedented — for a British lawmaker to use those powers to subvert the lawful order of an American court.
“Now you’ve got a clash between the court in California and the obligations in Parliament,” said Mark Stephens, a lawyer based in London who specializes in international litigation. “We do see things like this from time to time. But we’ve never had a foreign court be put in this situation before.”
Human Rights and Justice in Islam Islam provides many human rights for the individual. The following are some of these human rights that Islam protects. The life and property of all citizens in an Islamic state are considered sacred, whether a person is Muslim or not. Islam also protects honor. So, in Islam, insulting others or making fun of them is not allowed. The Prophet Muhammad said: {Truly your blood, your property, and your honor are inviolable.}1 Racism is not allowed in Islam, for the Quran speaks of human equality in the following terms: O mankind, We have created you from a male and a female and have made you into nations and tribes for you to know one another. Truly, the noblest of you with God is the most pious.2 Truly, God is All-Knowing, All-Aware. (Quran, 49:13) Islam rejects certain individuals or nations being favored because of their wealth, power, or race. God created human beings as equals who are to be dis...
With the advent of large-scale integrated circuits coming into their own in the late 1970s and early 1980s, fueling the PC revolution and several other developments, came a succession of remarkably powerful graphics controllers. NEC introduced the first LSI fully integrated graphics chip in 1982 with the NEC µ7220, and it was wildly successful finding its way into graphics terminals and workstations, but not PCs built by IBM. It did get used quite extensively by aftermarket suppliers. Hitachi did NEC one better and introduced their HD63484 ACRTC Advanced CRT Controller chip in 1984. It could support a resolution up to 4096 × 4096 in a 1-bit mode within a 2 Mbyte display (frame) memory. The ACRTC also proved to be very popular and found a home in dozens of products from terminals to PC graphics boards. However, these chips, pioneers of commodity graphics controllers, were just 2D drawing engines with some built in font generation. That same year IBM introduced the...
I'm a longtime Jaguar fan. I've owned a ton of them over the years, and I've had both good and bad experiences with the cars. Currently I own two -- a 1970 XKE and a 2014 F-Type -- and they are about to get a sibling. I've ordered a new Jaguar I-Pace, which is the first legitimate challenger to Tesla, which surprised the automotive industry much like Apple surprised the mobile phone industry. Tesla was first to build a decent electric car for this century. Not only that -- its Model S set records in terms of safety and reliability. Most of the problems the firm has had have been due to a lack of competency in manufacturing and a borderline insane CEO. However, the design of the cars, with the exception of the Tesla X, generally has been better than first rate. I recently read about Motor Trend 's head to head challenge between the Tesla Model 3, the I-Pace, and the Alpha Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio (don't get me started on naming). Even though the I...
Comments
Post a Comment