Zuckerberg didn’t make any friends in Europe today

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Speaking in front of EU lawmakers today Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg namechecked the GDPR core principles of &control, transparency and
accountability& — claiming his company will deliver on all that, come Friday, when a new European Union data protection framework, GDPR,
starts being applied, finally with penalties worth the enforcement. However there was little transparency or accountability on show during
the session, given the upfront questions format which saw Zuckerberg cherry-picking a few comfy themes to riff on after silently absorbing
an hour of MEPs& highly specific questions with barely a facial twitch in response. The questions MEPs asked of Zuckerberg were wide ranging
and often drilled deep into key pressure points around the ethics of Facebook business — ranging from how deep the app data misuse privacy
scandal rabbithole goes; to whether the company is a monopoly that needs breaking up; to how users should be compensated for misuse of their
data. Made clear to Mark Zuckerberg that digital platforms have to guarantee full protection of our citizens' privacy
We cannot accept illicit use of personal data to manipulate elections
Democracy cannot be turned into a marketing operation
pic.twitter.com/Nk0MB5IK8u — Antonio Tajani (@EP_President) May 22, 2018 Is Facebook genuinely complying with GDPR, he was asked several
times (unsurprisingly, given the scepticism of data protection experts on that front)
Why did it choose to shift ~1.5BN users out of reach of the GDPR Will it offer a version of its platform that lets people completely opt out
of targeted advertising, as it has studiously avoided doing so so far. Why did it refuse a public meeting with the EU parliament Why has it
spent &millions& lobbying against EU privacy rulesWill the company commit to paying taxes in the markets where it operates What it doing to
prevent fake accounts What it doing to prevent bullying Does it regulate content or is it a neutral platform Zuckerberg made like a sponge
and absorbed all this fine-grained flak
But when the time came for responses the data flow was not reciprocal; Self-serving talking points on self-selected &themes& was all he had
come prepared to serve up. Yet — and here the irony is very rich indeed — people personal data flows liberally into Facebook, via all
sorts of tracking technologies and techniques. And as the Cambridge Analytica data misuse scandal has now made amply clear, people personal
information has also very liberally leaked out of Facebook — oftentimes without their knowledge or consent. But when it comes to Facebook
own operations, the company maintains a highly filtered, extremely partial ‘newsfeed& on its business empire — keeping a tight grip on
the details of what data it collects and why. Only last month Zuckerberg sat in Congressavoiding giving straight answers to basic
operational questions
So if any EU parliamentarians had been hoping for actual transparency and genuine accountability from today session they would have been
sorely disappointed. Yes, you can download the data you&ve willingly uploaded to Facebook
Just don&t expect Facebook to give you a download of all the informationit gathered and inferred about you. The EU parliament political
group leaders seemed well tuned to the myriad concerns now flocking around Facebook business
And were quick to seize on Zuckerberg dumbshow as further evidence that Facebook needs to be ruled. Thing is, in Europe regulation is not a
dirty word
And GDPR extraterritorial reach and weighty public profile looks to be further whetting political appetites. So if Facebook was hoping the
mere appearance of its CEO sitting in a chair in Brussels, going through the motions of listening before reading from his usual talking
points, that looks to be a major miscalculation. &It was a disappointing appearance by Zuckerberg
By not answering the very detailed questions by the MEPs he didn&t use the chance to restore trust of European consumers but in contrary
showed to the political leaders in the European Parliament that stronger regulation and oversight is needed,& Green MEP and GDPR rapporteur
Jan Philipp Albrecht told us after the meeting. Albrecht had pressed Zuckerberg about how Facebook shares data between Facebook and WhatsApp
— an issue that has raised the ire of regional data protection agencies
And while DPAs forced the company to turn off some of these data flows, Facebookcontinues to share other data. The MEP had also asked
Zuckerberg to commit to no exchange of data between the two apps
Zuckerberg determinedly made no such commitment. Claude Moraes, chair of the EU parliament civil liberties, justice and home affairs (Libe)
committee, issued a slightly more diplomatic reaction statement after the meeting — yet also with a steely undertone. &Trust in Facebook
has suffered as a result of the data breach and it is clear that Mr
Zuckerberg and Facebook will have to make serious efforts to reverse the situation and to convince individuals that Facebook fully complies
with European Data Protection law
General statements like ‘We take privacy of our customers very seriously& are not sufficient, Facebook has to comply and demonstrate it,
and for the time being this is far from being the case,& he said. &The Cambridge Analytica scandal was already in breach of the current Data
Protection Directive, and would also be contrary to the GDPR, which is soon to be implemented
I expect the EU Data Protection Authorities to take appropriate action to enforce the law.& Damian Collins, chair of the UK parliament DCMS
committee, which has thrice tried and failed to get Zuckerberg to appear before it, did not mince his words at all
Albeit he has little reason to, having been so thoroughly rejected by the Facebook founder — and having accused the company of a pattern
of evasive behavior to its CTO face — there clearly not much to hold out for now. &What a missed opportunity for proper scrutiny on many
crucial questions raised by the MEPs
Questions were blatantly dodged on shadow profiles, sharing data between WhatsApp and Facebook, the ability to opt out of political
advertising and the true scale of data abuse on the platform,& said Collins in another reaction statement after the meeting.&Unfortunately
the format of questioning allowed Mr Zuckerberg to cherry-pick his responses and not respond to each individual point. &I echo the clear
frustration of colleagues in the room who felt the discussion was shut down,& he added, ending with a fourth (doubtless equally forlorn)
request for Zuckerberg to appear in front of the DCMS Committee to &provide Facebook users the answers they deserve&. In the latter stages
of today EU parliament session several MEPs — clearly very exasperated by the straightjacked format — resorted to heckling Zuckerberg to
press for answers he had not given them. &Shadow profiles,& interjected one, seizing on a moment hesitation as Zuckerberg sifted his notes
for the next talking point
&Compensation,& shouted another, earning a snort of laughter from the CEO and some more theatrical note flipping to buy himself time. Then,
appearingslightly flustered, Zuckerberg looked up at one of the hecklers and said he would engage with his question — about shadow
profiles (though Zuckerberg dare not speak that name, of course, given he claims not to recognize it) — arguing Facebook needs to hold
onto such data for security purposes. Zuckerberg did not specify, as MEPs had asked him to, whether Facebook uses data about non-users for
any purposes other than the security scenario he chose to flesh out (aka &keeping bad content out&, as he put it). He also ignored a second
follow-up pressing him on how non-users can &stop that data being transferred&. &On the security side we think it important to keep it to
protect people in our community,& Zuckerberg said curtly, before turning to his lawyer for a talking point prompt (couched as an ask if
there are &any other themes we wanted to get through&). His lawyer hissed to steer the conversation back to Cambridge Analytica — to
Facebook well-trodden PR about how they&re &locking down the platform& to stop any future data heists — and the Zuckbot was immediately
back in action regurgitating his now well-practiced crisis PR around the scandal. What was very clearly demonstrated during today session
was the Facebook founder preference for control — that to say control which he is exercising. Hence the fixed format of the meeting, which
had been negotiated prior to Facebook agreeing to meet with EU politicians, and which clearly favored the company by allowing no formal
opportunity for follow ups from MEPs. Zuckerberg also tried several times to wrap up the meeting — by insinuating and then announcing time
was up
MEPs ignored these attempts, and Zuckerberg seemed most uncomfortable at not having his orders instantly carried out. Instead he had to sit
and watch a micro negotiation between the EU parliament president and the political groups over whether they would accept written answers to
all their specific questions from Facebook — before he was publicly put on the spot by president Antonio Tajani to agree to provide the
answers in writing. Although, as Collins has already warned MEPs, Facebook has had plenty of practice at generating wordy but empty
responses to politicians& questions about its business processes — responses which evade the spirit and specifics of what being asked. The
self-control on show from Zuckerberg today is certainly not the kind of guardrails that European politicians increasingly believe social
media needs
Self-regulation, observed several MEPs to Zuckerberg face, hasn&t worked out so well has it The first MEP to lay out his questions warned
Zuckerberg that apologizing is not enough
Another pointed out he been on a contrition tour for about 15 years now. Facebook needs to make a &legal and moral commitment& to the EU
fundamental values, he was told by Moraes
&Remember that you&re here in the European Union where we created GDPR so we ask you to make a legal and moral commitment, if you can, to
uphold EU data protection law, to think about ePrivacy, to protect the privacy of European users and the many millions of European citizens
and non-Facebook users as well,& said the Libe committee chair. But self-regulation — or, the next best thing in Zuckerberg eyes:
‘Facebook-shaped regulation& — was what he had come to advocate for, picking up on the MEPs& regulation &theme& to respond with the same
line he fed to Congress: &I don&t think the question here is whether or not there should be regulation
I think the question is what is the right regulation.& &The Internet is becoming increasingly important in people lives
Some sort of regulation is important and inevitable
And the important thing is to get this right,& he continued
&To make sure that we have regulatory frameworks that help protect people, that are flexible so that they allow for innovation, that don&t
inadvertently prevent new technologies like AI from being able to develop.& He even brought up startups — claiming ‘bad regulation& (I
paraphrase) could present a barrier to the rise of future dormroom Zuckerbergs. Of course he failed to mention how his own dominant platform
is the attention-sapping, app gobbling elephant in the room crowding out the next generation of would-be entrepreneurs
But MEPs& concerns about competition were clear. Instead of making friends and influencing people in Brussels, Zuckerberg looks to have
delivered less than if he&d stayed away — angering and alienating the very people whose job it will be to amend the EU legislation that
coming down the pipe for his platform. Ironically one of the few specific questions Zuckerberg chose to answer was a false claim by MEP
Nigel Farage — who had wondered whether Facebook is still a &neutral political platform&, griping about drops in engagement for rightwing
entities ever since Facebook algorithmic changes in January, before claiming, erroneously, that Facebook does not disclose the names of the
third party fact checkers it uses to help it police fake news. So — significantly, and as was also evident in the US Senate and Congress
— Facebook was taking flak from both left and right of political spectrum, implying broad, cross-party support for regulating these
algorithmic platforms. Actually Facebook does disclose those fact checking partnerships
But it pretty telling that Zuckerberg chose to expend some of his oh-so-slender speaking time to debunk something that really didn&t merit
the breath. Farage had also claimed, during his three minutes, that without &Facebook and other forms of social media there is no way that
Brexit or Trump or the Italian elections could ever possibly have happened&. Funnily enough Zuckerberg didn&t make time to comment on that.