The federal government has finalized its settlement with Facebook to resolve charges that the social network exposed details about users’ lives without getting the required legal consent. It isn’t the only tech company to have dealings with the government over privacy.
Here are some recent government actions related to privacy:
March 30, 2011: The Federal Trade Commission announces a settlement with Google Inc. The search-engine and advertising company agrees to adopt a comprehensive privacy program to settle federal charges that it deceived users and violated its own privacy policy when it launched a social-networking service called Buzz. The settlement mandates independent audits to oversee and verify Google’s privacy program every other year for the next 20 years. The settlement also requires Google to obtain user consent before sharing consumer information with third parties if it alters a service to use the data in a way that would violate its existing privacy policy. Google signed the deal in October.
Nov. 29: The FTC announces settlement with Facebook Inc. The social-networking site agrees to submit to government audits of its privacy practices every other year for the next two decades. The company commits to getting explicit approval from its users _ a process known as “opting in” _ before changing their privacy controls. Facebook doesn’t admit any wrongdoing.
Feb. 16, 2012: The FTC issues a report complaining that software companies producing games and other mobile applications aren’t telling parents what personal information is being collected from kids and how companies are using it. It says apps could quietly be collecting a child’s location, phone number, call logs and lists of friends.
Feb. 22: California announces a crackdown on nosy mobile applications, telling them they must give people advance warning if they want to keep pulling sensitive information from smartphones and tablet computers. Leading companies in mobile services, including Google, Apple and Microsoft, agree to require mobile apps seeking to collect personal information to forewarn users by displaying privacy policies before their services are installed on a device.
Feb. 23: The Obama administration calls for stronger privacy protections for consumers as mobile gadgets, Internet services and other tools are able to do a better job of tracking what you do and where you go. The administration issues a report in which it outlines a proposed “Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights” and urges technology companies, consumer groups and others to jointly craft new protections. Such guidelines will initially be voluntary for companies, but those that agree to abide by them could be subject to FTC sanctions for any violations.
April 13: The Federal Communications Commission fines Google $25,000, saying the online search leader “deliberately impeded and delayed” an investigation into how it collected data while taking photos for its “Street View” mapping feature. The FCC also says it will not take action against Google over its data collection. Part of the reason for that is that it still has “significant factual questions” about the Street View project that haven’t been answered.
April 26: Google disputes the FCC’s characterization of the probe and says the FCC was the party that took its time. Google argues that the 17-month inquiry would have gone much more quickly if the FCC hadn’t dawdled so much. In some instances, Google says the FCC took seven to 12 weeks to respond to information that the company had submitted. Google says it accepted the fine to close the case.
May 8: Myspace reaches settlement with FTC with terms similar to agency’s deals with Google and Facebook. The FTC says that despite telling users it would not share personally identifiable information with others, Myspace gave advertisers users’ “Friend ID” numbers. That allowed advertisers to find users’ publicly available personal information, often including full names, and could lead advertisers to discover users’ Web-browsing activity. In the settlement, Myspace agreed not to misrepresent its privacy policies. It also agreed to implement a comprehensive privacy program and to submit to independent privacy assessments every other year for two decades.
Aug. 9: The FTC announces that Google has agreed to pay a $22.5 million fine to settle allegations that it broke a privacy promise by secretly tracking the online activities of millions of people who use Apple’s Safari web browser. It’s the largest penalty ever imposed by the FTC. Google isn’t admitting any wrongdoing. The fine isn’t over Google’s data collection, but for misrepresenting what was happening, in violation of an October agreement to settle the Buzz case.
Aug. 10: The FTC finalizes November settlement with Facebook after public comment period.
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