- Facebook is dropping its public opposition to a proposed new privacy law in California and is withdrawing from the campaign committee working against it.
- The company had previously contributed $200,000 to the opposition campaign, as did Comcast and Google.
- Facebook moves followed CEO Mark Zuckerberg's congressional appearances this week, where he faced tough questions about his company's privacy practices.
Under scrutiny for how it collects and uses consumer data, Facebook will no longer actively work to defeat a proposed new privacy bill in California.
The social networking company, along with Google and Comcast, has been funding the opposition to the measure, dubbed the California Consumer Privacy Act, and was a part of the campaign committee working against it. But it's withdrawing its support for the opposition campaign, a company spokesman confirmed.
"We took this step in order to focus our efforts on supporting reasonable privacy measures in California," the spokesman said.
KPIX, San Francisco's CBS affiliate station, had previously reported the change in Facebook's stance on the measure.
#UPDATE: KPIX Exclusive @facebook will no longer back the opposition to the Nov ballot measure known as the CA #ConsumerPrivacyAct
— KPIX 5 (@KPIXtv) April 11, 2018
FB tells us: “We took this step in order to focus our efforts on supporting reasonable privacy measures in #California.”
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But the move may not be as dramatic as it sounds.
All the company has really done formally is withdraw from the opposition group's campaign committee, said Steven Maviglio, the No campaign's spokesman. Facebook still opposes the California Consumer Privacy Act and thinks it's flawed, he said.
"It is unsurprising that proponents ... are looking to distract from their deeply flawed initiative," Maviglio said in an email.
A source close to the opposition campaign confirmed Maviglio's account, including Facebook's belief that the measure is flawed. However, the source added that Facebook does not plan to contribute any more money to the opposition campaign.
The company's move to back off its public support for the measure follows company CEO Mark Zuckerberg's second day of testimony on Capitol Hill. Zuckerberg and his company are facing scrutiny from lawmakers following the leak of data on up to 87 million Facebook users to Cambridge Analytica, a data analysis firm that worked with Donald Trump's presidential campaign.
California's proposed privacy law, which will be on the state's November ballot, would guarantee citizens the rights to see what kinds of information large companies are collecting on them, and to prohibit those companies from selling their personal information. The law would bar such companies from discriminating against customers who asked that the companies not sell their information. And it would allow consumers to sue companies over data breaches.
Facebook, Comcast, AT&T, Google, and Verizon have each contributed $200,000 to the campaign to defeat the proposal. Proponents have raised $1.35 million in cash, all from Alastair Mactaggart, a San Francisco real estate developer.
The Facebook spokesman did not immediately respond when asked whether Facebook plans to contribute now to the campaign supporting the privacy measure.
Meanwhile, Facebook has been reportedly lobbying to weaken protections under Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. The spokesman also did not immediately respond to a question about whether the company would continue with that effort.
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