Facebook's FTC headache will soon be over and it looks like Mark Zuckerberg will emerge unscathed.
The Federal Trade Commission will formally announce its record-setting $5 billion fine against Facebook this week, according The Wall Street Journal.
The fine, the result of the FTC's long-running investigation into the social network's privacy practices following Cambridge Analytica, will be the largest the agency has ever brought against a tech company. Still, many critics have already said the fine does not go far enough to punish Facebook, which took in more than $15 billion last quarter alone. (Facebook's stock actually rosefollowing news of the fine earlier this month.)
But no one is getting off easier than Facebook's CEO, who will successfully avoid any personal accountability for his company's missteps. A new report in the Washington Postdetails how Zuckerberg managed to avoid being personally singled out by the FTC, despite some of the commission members' efforts to do so.
According to the report, at least two FTC members wanted to put Zuckerberg under order, meaning the CEO could personally face fines if Facebook made future mistakes. That would not only ramp up the pressure on Zuckerberg, but it would have been a huge embarrassment for the notoriously image-conscious CEO. Which is likely why Facebook's lawyers fiercely fought any settlement that would even call out specific statements made my Zuckerberg, much less a direct order.
From the Washington Post'sdescription of how the negotiations went down:
Facebook’s team of lawyers, overseen by Colin Stretch, the company’s general counsel, steadfastly opposed placing Zuckerberg under order, including during meetings with commission negotiators starting last year. The tech giant’s internal briefing materials reflected its willingness to cease settlement talks and send the matter to court, if necessary, to protect their executive from one of the most severe penalties the FTC could levy on him directly. Commission staff at one point sought to include in their order a section that pointed out all the times that Zuckerberg had spoken or posted publicly about Facebook’s privacy commitments. Facebook vigorously battled against that, too.
Both the FTC and Facebook were apparently eager to avoid a drawn out legal battle, which would be inevitable if the two sides didn't agree to a settlement. As the report points out, Facebook has significantly more resources at its disposal than the government agency, and a federal judge could have watered down terms of the agreement even more.
Still, for anyone hoping the FTC settlement would finally hold Zuckerberg to account for the company's numerous privacy violations, this will be a huge disappointment. Though Facebook will ultimately have to submit to some increased oversight, Zuckerberg just proved he is as untouchable as ever.
文章
55
浏览
62
获赞
7948
How to change your TikTok username
TikTok has evolved in the years since it was once Musical.ly. Now, instead of being purely a place fResilient star survives a giant supernova explosion
This is a tale of survival.In the deep cosmos, the Hubble Space Telescope found evidence that a starGreta Thunberg takes down Ted Cruz for being a total idiot about climate change
The last four years have given Greta Thunberg plenty of practice when it comes to expertly shading pHow to connect Google Home to Netflix
If your personal assistant is taking the day off and your dog is napping, you may find yourself wondPandemic on Steam is the perfect quarantine activity
The best thing most of us can do to fight the global pandemic is nothing: stay home, stay safe, publTwitter's 'Super Follow' will finally let you charge for your precious tweets
Your #content will definitely be worth every penny.During a Thursday investor call, Twitter announceNASA flew over Jupiter's ocean moon Europa and captured stunning footage
Beyond Earth, there are likely other oceans in our solar system.Planetary scientists suspect JupiterNyan Cat GIF sells for $600K in ethereum. No bubble to see here!
A digital cat just sold for an ungodly amount of cryptocurrency. Nyan Cat, arguably 2011's hottest cHow to add voiceovers to your TikToks
Whether informative, sardonic, or both, voiceovers can enhance a TikTok video for clarity and humor.Police requests for Ring videos have to be made in public now
Amazon's Ring video doorbell service has a cop problem. The latest Ring policy change won't fix thatTesla is building a massive battery for Texas
Tesla knows how to manufacture massive batteries, just ask Australia. Now it's producing another oneSpotify menu suggests HiFi streaming might launch soon
In February, Spotify announced a new membership tier called Spotify HiFi, allowing users to listen tScientists figured out the Moderna COVID
Hackers have posted a brand new trove of reverse-engineered data on Github.And by "hackers," I meanOn Mars, NASA detects fresh new impact craters from space rocks
Just over a year ago, a space rock hurtled through the Martian atmosphere, broke apart, and slammedPixel 5a leaks, looks pretty much the same as Pixel 4a 5G
Google's Pixel 5a is coming, and its design will surprise absolutely no one. Leaker of smartphone th