On Tuesday,teens virgenes anal video sex Mark Zuckerberg will speak with Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) about Facebook data abuses perpetrated by Cambridge Analytica, and how that scandal affected European citizens and government.
SEE ALSO: Facebook says Cambridge Analytica got data on up to 87 million usersIt is the second time the Facebook CEO will have to publicly answer for the unintended political consequences of his company's sweeping data collection. In April, Zuckerberg testified before both houses of the United States Congress. During those hearings, he got hammered by some congresspeople about the shadier aspects of data collection. But Team Facebook mostly came out on top thanks to U.S. lawmakers' shaky understanding of how the internet works.
But in technologically and privacy-progressive Europe, the hearings may actually force Zuckerberg to answer some tough questions. Here are three things to watch out for during Zuckerberg's European parliamentary hearing.
Cambridge Analytica's use of Facebook data affected 2.7 million Europeans. That's a fraction of the 87 million total Facebook users affected — most of them based in the U.S. But whistleblower Christopher Wylie revealed that Cambridge Analytica used Facebook data and ad-targeting to influence the Brexit campaign.
Facebook is currently rolling out new election advertising policies, and is giving users more control over data collection with its “clear history” feature. But these are all fixes for the future, and don't exactly make amends for how Facebook enabled mass data collection and electioneering. Will the MEPs require that Zuckerberg actually answer for Facebook's role in, say, the United Kingdom leaving the European Union?
The deadline for compliance with Europe's new online privacy regulations, GDPR, is just three days away. Facebook plans to comply with the regulations. At the same time, it has specifically taken steps to limit the privacy controls required by GDPR for non-EU citizens.
Zuckerberg may (and should) have to answer for how separated European profiles will be from the rest of Facebook; that is, how secure and dedicated to privacy can Facebook really be if only some users receive access to these stringent privacy controls?
Lawmakers may want to ask, if Mark Zuckerberg says Facebook is dedicated to user privacy, why not extend the new tools it's building in for European citizens to everyone? Answering these questions may be important to determining whether Facebook is an actual ally in user privacy and data collection, or whether it is just paying lip service to it.
Is Mark Zuckerberg a cyborg/lizard person? The world will be watching his (non) reactions and (generally colorless) pallor to find out.
Topics Cybersecurity Facebook Social Media
Researchers make ChatGPT generate malware codeChemistry Nobel awarded to developers of lithium'Fire Emblem Engage' reviewElon Musk's Twitter is hosting an online garage sale for all its office junkWatch Olympic divers flawlessly take on the 'Avengers' pool challengeGoogle might be making its own version of Apple's AirTagsMicrosoft is laying off 10,000 employees13 political Halloween costumes that are crucially not Donald TrumpWant another great video game adaptation like 'The Last of Us'? Watch 'Arcane.''Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for January 1812 meme costume ideas for Halloween 2019Samsung adds Galaxy S22 to iFixit selfTim Cook on Hong Kong protest app removal: We did it to protect our usersTrump tweeted a photo of Nancy Pelosi to insult her, and it backfired spectacularlyThe 'No guy has all 3' meme has the internet searching for the perfect manIt's Friday, so here's a dog vibin' to Post Malone and Swae LeeThis developer used ChatGPT’s brain to build a super'The Legend of Vox Machina' Season 2 review: Bigger, darker, and more dragonNetflix's password sharing crackdown is finally happening early 2023Tinder launches 'Swipe Night,' its new interactive TV show Andy Weir, author of 'The Martian', will have a new book out in November Snapchat's constant evolution shows it won't let itself be crushed by Facebook Weird Neil deGrasse Tyson 'pants' tweet was an accident, which makes it even stranger tbh Microsoft CEO: It's our job to prevent '1984' from coming true Microsoft Video Indexer can identify emotions of people in videos Snapchat update adds 'limitless' snaps, looping videos and more emoji Finally, someone combines a salt shaker, Bluetooth speaker and mood lighting The internet has a few incredibly depressing candidates to be Trump's new FBI director Extremely lit sign language interpreter steals the show at Snoop Dogg's concert Citymapper's pop Everyone's favorite retro phone, the Nokia 3310, finally has a release date Yelp is having a truly brutal day 'American Idol' is officially coming back because time is a flat circle Dude is so thirsty he actually believes that threesome invitation at Buckingham Place is real Windows 10 hits 500 million users The Amazon Echo Show is real and it's got a 7 Rejoice: George R.R. Martin has a new 'Game of Thrones' story coming out Don’t believe that ‘James Comey’ pee tape tweet Cortana will soon have a lot more skills to show off Prosecco and rosé popsicles will take your summer to the next level
1.1014s , 10522.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【teens virgenes anal video sex】,Steady Information Network