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Facebook Denies Reported FTC Consent Decree Violations

Facebook partnerships with other companies didn’t allow access to personal data without consent, nor did they violate a 2012 consent decree with the FTC, Director-Developer Platforms and Programs Konstantinos Papamiltiadis responded Tuesday. The New York Times reported, based on 2017 documents, Facebook gave access to personal data, sometimes allegedly without consent, to Microsoft, Apple, Netflix, Spotify, Amazon, Yahoo and Russia Kremlin-linked search company Yandex. The agreements let users integrate Facebook features on other apps, Papamiltiadis said, and it has since ceased many such partnerships. Agreements remain active with Amazon, Apple, Alibaba, Mozilla and Opera, he said. Authorization to the data is granted when a user logs into apps through Facebook, he said. The FTC should consider these new allegations in its current Facebook investigation, and Congress needs to move forward with legislation in 2019, Public Knowledge Policy Counsel Charlotte Slaiman said. Washington, D.C., Attorney General Karl Racine (D) Wednesday sued Facebook for mishandling user data in the Cambridge Analytica scandal and failing to report the breach. Racine seeks “monetary and injunctive relief, including relief for harmed consumers, damages, and penalties to the District” for violating D.C.'s Consumer Protection Procedures Act. “We’re reviewing the complaint and look forward to continuing our discussions with attorneys general,” a Facebook spokesperson emailed. "If there's one complaint filed in court in the District of Columbia you consider reading today, make it this one: http://oag.dc.gov/sites/default/," tweeted FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel.