spot_img

Facebook gave data on user’s friends to certain companies

Date:

Trending

Facebook Inc offered some companies, including Netflix and Airbnb, access to data about users’ friends it did not make available to most other apps in 2015, according to documents released by a British lawmaker who said the social media company dodged questions about privacy practices and market dominance.

- Advertisement -

The 223 pages released on Wednesday were internal communications from 2012 to 2015 between company leaders, including Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, providing fresh evidence and sparking new political scrutiny about previously aired allegations that Facebook has picked favourites and engaged in anti-competitive behaviour.

Facebook said it stood by its deliberations and decisions. “The facts are clear. We’ve never sold people’s data,” it said.

- Advertisement -

The company said it would relax one “out-of-date” policy that restricted competitors’ use of its data. Previously, “Mark level sign-off” would have been required for an exemption to the policy, according to one document, referring to Zuckerberg.

The documents show that Facebook tracked growth of competitors and denied them access to key data.

- Advertisement -

Zuckerberg agreed to senior executive Justin Osofsky’s request in 2013 to stop giving friends’ list access to Vine on the day that social media rival Twitter Inc launched the video-sharing service.

“We’ve prepared reactive PR,” Osofsky wrote, to which Zuckerberg replied, “Yup, go for it.”

‘MARK’S FRIENDS’ or ‘SHERYL’S’ FRIENDS’
Among non-competitors, Facebook still drew distinctions.

Ride service Lyft, which does not compete with Facebook, wanted access to comprehensive lists of users’ friends to show carpool riders their mutual friends as an “ice breaker.” Facebook approved the request, saying in an email it would add to a feeling of “safety” for riders.

In 2014, the company described about 100 apps as being either “Mark’s friends” or “Sheryl’s friends” and also tracked how many apps were spending money on Facebook ads, according to the documents, referring to Zuckerberg and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg.

Other emails describe Facebook denying online ticket seller Ticketmaster and an automotive technology supplier extended access to complete lists of users’ friends after Facebook questioned how the date would be used.

The documents also raised questions about Facebook’s transparency.

An exchange from 2015 shows Facebook leaders discussing how to begin collecting call logs from Android users’ smartphones without subjecting them to “scary” permissions screens.

The effort began with some disclosures in 2015. But when the data-collecting became more well known this year amid increased scrutiny on Facebook, the company drew criticism from lawmakers about not doing more to inform users.

Misuse of Facebook user data by Cambridge Analytica, a political consulting firm, along with another data breach this year and revelations about Facebook’s lobbying tactics have heightened government scrutiny globally on the company’s privacy and content moderation practices.

Stifel analysts on Wednesday lowered their rating on Facebook shares to “hold,” saying that “political and regulatory blowback seems like it may lead to restrictions on how Facebook operates, over time.”

U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal described the documents as part of “mounting evidence that Facebook acted chaotically, recklessly and lawlessly by granting access to private consumer data for financial gain.”

Company executives weighed charging other apps for access to its developer tools, including the friends lists, if they did not buy a certain amount of advertising from Facebook, according to the emails. In one from 2012, Zuckerberg wrote that he was drawing inspiration for business models from books he had been reading about the banking industry.

Facebook said it ultimately maintained free access to the tools.

Damian Collins, a Conservative British parliamentarian who leads a committee on media and culture, made the internal documents public after demanding them last month under threat of sanction from Six4Three.

The developer of the defunct app, which allowed people to find pictures of people wearing bikinis, obtained the documents as part of its ongoing lawsuit in California state court alleging that Facebook violated promises to app developers when it ended their access to likes, photos and other data of users’ friends in 2015.

Facebook, which has described the Six4Three case as baseless, said the released communications were “selectively leaked.”

‘WHITELISTED’ FOR ACCESS TO FRIENDS DATA
Though filed under seal and redacted in the lawsuit, the internal communications needed to be made public because “they raise important questions about how Facebook treats users’ data, their policies for working with app developers, and how they exercise their dominant position in the social media market,” Collins said on Twitter.

Dating app Badoo, Netflix and Airbnb were among companies ‘whitelisted’ for access to data about users’ friends, the documents showed. Netflix, Airbnb, Lyft and Badoo did not respond to requests for comment.

[wp-embedder-pack width=”100%” height=”400px” download=”logged-in” download-text=”” url=”https://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-committees/culture-media-and-sport/Note-by-Chair-and-selected-documents-ordered-from-Six4Three.pdf” /]

Facebook described such deals as short-term extensions, but it is unclear exactly when the various agreements ended.

Friends’ data had stoked the growth of many apps because it enabled people to easily connect with Facebook buddies on a new service. Many complained about being shut out as others got extensions.

The glimpse into Facebook shows that Zuckerberg considered the competitive risks posed by allowing third-party developers to piggyback on his company’s user data, but may have failed to appreciated the security risks.

“At some level I think helping your competitors is a fact of life,” he wrote in a 2012 email to a lieutenant. “We need to make sure we’re not doing this to an extent that it destroys us, but we also shouldn’t be so rigid as to rule out any model where competitors get benefit from us.”

By 2014, Facebook realized that some developers had built “sketchy” apps and overhauled its tools for all developers, he wrote in a post on Wednesday.

“This change meant that a lot of sketchy apps – like the quiz app that sold data to Cambridge Analytica – could no longer operate on our platform,” he said.

He wrote that the company could have prevented the Cambridge Analytica data breach scandal had it cracked down on app developers a year earlier in 2014.

THE SNAPSHOTS

Sign up to get quick snaps of everyday happening, directly in your inbox.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

- Advertisement -
Krishna Mali
Krishna Mali
Founder & Group Editor of TechGraph.
Advertisement

More Latest Stories

More Articles

The Cost of Blind Trust: How Inadequate Verification Is Fueling India’s Data Scam Epidemic

India’s digital economy is expanding faster than ever. From gig platforms and financial services to e-commerce and remote hiring, millions of transactions, profiles, and...

The Rise of Emotionally Intelligent AI: What It Means for Customer Experience

A shift is transpiring across customer touchpoints as digital systems start to understand the emotional cues that determine decisions. The change becomes evident the moment an interaction stops feeling transactional, when technology adjusts its tone, pauses at the right moment, or responds with sensitivity...

How Autonomous Infrastructure Will Shape the Future of Enterprise Technology in 2026

Autonomous infrastructure is moving from imagination to inevitability. With its strengths in anticipation, analysis,...

NVIDIA EVP Debora Shoquist Offloads 80,000 Shares for About $14.77 Mn

NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) Executive Vice President of Operations, Debora Shoquist has sold 80,000...

AI Infrastructure Wars: Do Nvidia, Amazon, and Microsoft Still Have Room to Run?

Indian investors are at a pivotal moment. While our domestic markets have seen meteoric...

Inside Channel Economy: Almonds AI CEO Abhinav Jain on Fixing the Blind Spot in India’s Distribution Ecosystem

Speaking with TechGraph, Abhinav Jain, Co-Founder and CEO of Almonds AI, outlined how India’s...

Reimagining Live Sports Coverage: wTVision’s Divyajot Ahluwalia on How Robot Dog Champak Transformed IPL Broadcasting

Speaking with TechGraph, Divyajot Ahluwalia, Founder & Director of wTVision Solutions Pvt. Ltd., discussed...

Supreme Court Allows Texas to Use New Congressional Map for 2026 Midterms

The U.S. Supreme Court has allowed Texas to move ahead with its newly redrawn...

Ram Shriram Reports Transfers of Alphabet Shares Through Trust Annuity Payments

Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Director K. Ram Shriram has reported movements in his Alphabet shareholdings following annuity payments made from two irrevocable trusts on...

Beyond Instant Approvals: PayMe CEO Mahesh Shukla on Building Compliant Lending for India’s New Credit Economy

Speaking with TechGraph, Mahesh Shukla, Founder and CEO of PayMe, discussed how India’s digital...

Meta Declares Quarterly Cash Dividend Of $0.525 Per Share

Facebook parent company, Meta Platforms Inc. (NASDAQ:META) said its board of directors has declared...

Demystifying Private Equity Market: WWIPL MD Krishna Patwari on Expanding Retail Access to India’s Unlisted Ecosystem

Speaking with TechGraph, Krishna Patwari, Founder and Managing Director of Wealth Wisdom India Pvt....

The Evolving Classroom: Venkateshwar International School’s Pooja Sharma on Changing Role of Schools in Delhi’s CBSE Ecosystem

Speaking with TechGraph, Pooja Sharma, Vice Principal of Venkateshwar International School (VIS), discussed how...

Digital Generics: How AI is Redefining the Future of Affordable Medicine

It was with pride that global headlines described India as the world's pharmacy, supplying close to 20% of global generic drug exports. Today, the...

Understanding What Makes Sunscreen Truly Effective

Many people pick a sunscreen merely based on its SPF, thus they think that a higher number means better protection. However, SPF is only one factor in the product's effectiveness. The product's texture, the ingredients, the coverage, and also the way in which you...

Why NoSQL Databases Are the Future for Tech Startups

In today’s digital-first economy, tech startups continue to dominate the startup landscape. A startup...

Delhi IGI Airport Revamped Terminal 2 with Advanced Baggage screening systems

Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport (IGI) has reopened its reconstructed Terminal 2, inaugurated by...

Reimagining Creative Operations: ButtonShift’s Deepankar Das on Bringing Telemetry & Visual Intelligence to Modern Workflows

Speaking with TechGraph, Deepankar Das, Co-Founder and CEO of ButtonShift, discussed how traditional task...

The Rise of Cyber Cartels: How the Dark Web Fuels Digital Extortion?

In 2025, cybercrime has evolved beyond individual hackers or little ransomware criminal gangs into...

AI Research Startup Redrob Draws $10 Mn In Series A Funding Led By Korea Investment Partners

AI research startup Redrob has secured $10 million in its Series A round led...

The Future Employability Equation: PrepInsta’s Manish Agarwal on How AI Is Reshaping Student Readiness for Hiring in India

Speaking with TechGraph, Manish Agarwal, Co-Founder of PrepInsta, discussed how the increasing adoption of...

AI as a Growth Multiplier: How Smart Companies Accelerate Without Breaking

In today’s business environment, smart growth is just as important as any other form...

Beyond Price Points: Unix India’s Imran Kagalwala on Redefining Consumer Expectations in the Mobile Accessories Market

Speaking with TechGraph, Imran Kagalwala, Co-founder of Unix India, discussed how a crowded accessories...

Starbucks Baristas Rally in New York as Strike Over Pay and Staffing Extends Nationwide

Starbucks baristas rallied in New York City as part of an open-ended strike that...

Demystifying Private Equity Market: WWIPL MD Krishna Patwari on Expanding Retail Access to India’s Unlisted Ecosystem

Speaking with TechGraph, Krishna Patwari, Founder and Managing Director of Wealth Wisdom India Pvt....

The Future of Health Philanthropy: IGF India CEO Sundeep Talwar on Making Preventive Care Accessible for Underserved Communities

Speaking with TechGraph, Sundeep Talwar, CEO of IGF India, discussed the foundation’s decade-long journey...

The Rise of the AI Agent Economy: How Voice AI Agents Are Becoming the New Frontline Workforce For Call Centers

The work inside a call center has always depended on two things: speed and...

How AI is Improving Risk Management Among Crypto Traders

Over the past few years, the role of Artificial Intelligence in almost every sector...

The AI Advantage: How Intelligent Learning Solutions Are Rewriting Workforce Productivity in 2025 and Beyond

In 2025, artificial intelligence is no longer a futuristic concept — it’s the invisible...

The Evolving Classroom: Venkateshwar International School’s Pooja Sharma on Changing Role of Schools in Delhi’s CBSE Ecosystem

Speaking with TechGraph, Pooja Sharma, Vice Principal of Venkateshwar International School (VIS), discussed how...

Beyond Price Points: Unix India’s Imran Kagalwala on Redefining Consumer Expectations in the Mobile Accessories Market

Speaking with TechGraph, Imran Kagalwala, Co-founder of Unix India, discussed how a crowded accessories...

Trump Says He Will Sue BBC Over Edited Broadcast of Jan 6 Speech

US President Donald Trump has said he plans to take legal action against the...

Starbucks Baristas Rally in New York as Strike Over Pay and Staffing Extends Nationwide

Starbucks baristas rallied in New York City as part of an open-ended strike that...