The Star Malaysia

Manila to probe FB data breach

Privacy commission to investigat­e impact of leak on Filipino users

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Manila: The Philippine government said it was investigat­ing the breach of data of its citizens who use Facebook, after a massive leak of user informatio­n to British political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica.

Manila’s National Privacy Commission has written to Mark Zuckerberg requiring the Facebook chief to submit to the government body documents that would shed light on the scope and impact of the leak on Filipino users.

“We are launching an investiga- tion into Facebook to determine whether there is unauthoris­ed processing of personal data of Filipinos,” said a copy of the letter, released to the press yesterday.

The letter, dated Wednesday, said 1.18 million Filipino Facebook users “may have been affected by the Cambridge Analytica incident”.

“The Philippine­s has exceeded user growth projection­s and now has more than 67 million active Facebook users.

“It is our duty to protect the data privacy interests of these users, and to provide those affected with avenues for redress,” the letter added.

The Facebook founder apologised in US congressio­nal hearings this week over how his company has handled the growing furore over online privacy.

Zuckerberg said Facebook had “failed” to protect people’s informatio­n following the use by Cambridge Analytica of data scraped from 87 million Facebook users to target political ads ahead of the 2016 US presidenti­al election. Separately, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte rejected suggestion­s in the local press that his election campaign team worked with Cambridge Analytica in his successful 2016 presidenti­al run.

“I don’t know them. Honestly, I don’t believe in surveys,” he told a news conference in his southern home city of Davao.

“And why would I pay these fools from Cambridge to work for my campaign?

“I might have lost with them,” he added.

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