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May 29, 2019 12:25 am PDT

What the FTC should do AFTER it fines Facebook $3-5B

Facebook is about to pay the largest privacy-related fine in US history: $3-5B (the company made $3.3B in Q1/2019).

The FTC's fines are a nice start, but fines are just part of the cost of doing business. To change Facebook's conduct, the FTC should impose structural changes on the company, and EFF's Bennett Cyphers has some suggestions: ban third-party tracking; prohibit the combining of data from Whatsapp, Instagram and Facebook; and ban the company from targeting ads with information from data brokers.

That's for starters.

Stop Third-Party Tracking

Facebook uses Like buttons, invisible Pixel conversion trackers, and ad code in mobile apps to track its users nearly any time they use the Interneteven when theyre off Facebook products. This program allows Facebook to build nauseatingly detailed profiles of usersand non-userspersonal activity. Facebooks unique ability to match third-party website activity to real-world identities also gives it a competitive advantage in both the social media and third-party ad markets. The FTC should order Facebook to stop linking data it collects outside of Facebook with user profiles inside the social network.

Dont Merge WhatsApp, Instagram, and Facebook Data

Facebook has announced plans to build a unified chat platform so that users can send messages between WhatsApp, Messenger, and Instagram accounts seamlessly. Letting users of different services talk to each other is reasonable, and Facebooks commitment to end-to-end encryption for the unified service is great (if its for real). But in order to link the services together, Facebook will likely need to merge account data from its disparate properties.

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