[Air-L] Fwd: Facebook data destruction

jkd jkd at email.unc.edu
Thu Mar 18 08:04:42 PDT 2010


I'm not going to sanction Facebook's rather cavalier attitude towards the
selling/dissemination of personally identifiable information (though I do
agree with Michael that Warden's use violates the ToS and their own does
not); however, I think it's important to think about the different
mechanisms for accountability in both cases.

With an enormous data set released to the open web, there are no longer any
mechanisms for accounability. Don't like that your personal information is
out there? Too bad: it's not coming back, and you can be sure that
datamining/harvesting businesses would've been the first to download that
data (even if academic researchers would, too). 

With Facebook dealing in more B2B transactions, there is certainly a high
degree of opacity, and I personally would probably disappove of a lot of
their transactions. But at least in this case there are clear lines and
mechanisms for accountability, derived both from the ToS (however
user-unfriendly they are) and through the legally-binding data use
contracts that FB is arranging with other companies. In practice,
individuals are still up the creek a bit with regard to their own data on a
personal basis but there's at least a clear line of blame and
accountability for potential abuses. 

What's more potentially powerful in this context is the possibility of a
class-action lawsuit enacted on behalf of a huge mass of FB users against
any business that flagrantly violates privacy norms and/or against FB
itself, a possibility of which I'm sure FB is keenly aware. 

Again: not sanctioning their behavior, but keeping this stuff behind a wall
does have certain benefits in terms of potential remedies for bad action
that become impossible when it's released fully into the wild.

jkd

On Thu, 18 Mar 2010 14:42:49 +0000, Nick White <air-l at njw.me.uk> wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 08:32:41AM -0500, Michael Zimmer wrote:
>> I'm not surprised that Facebook has requested this action. But contrary
>> to Warden's quote, I see a difference between the data being _available_
>> to commercial firms (which he means crawlable by search engine spiders,
>> if I'm reading the post correctly), and having it _released en masse_ to
>> the public in an easily digestible form.
>> 
>> Given the threat of a lawsuit, it appears that the former is allowed by
>> Facebook's TOS, but the latter is not. And, clearly, there is the
problem
>> of taking the information outside of its intended context once you
>> aggregate it and release it to the public, as I previously detailed
here:
>>
>> "Why Pete Warden Should Not Release Profile Data on 215 Million Facebook
>> Users"
>>
http://michaelzimmer.org/2010/02/12/why-pete-warden-should-not-release-profile-data-on-215-million-facebook-users/
> 
> While crawling public information for a generic search engine may 
> not violate a sense of contextual integrity, that isn't the only 
> other use of such data. A couple of examples could be a firm using 
> facebook mining to build up / improve a profile of me to sell to 
> others, or a government using the information to broaden a database 
> on citizen's political leanings. Those certainly go beyond the
> expectations of usage of a lot of users of facebook.
> 
> At present this sort of information is available to anyone with the 
> resources to gather it (which aren't enormous). Of course, even if 
> facebook tightens this up in the future, they're keen to sell plenty 
> of personal information to others (which doesn't seem to be well 
> understood among users I've spoken to), which does weaken the 
> argument that they have an obligation to reconsider how/what public 
> information is published.
> 
> Nick White
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