Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Can Zuckerberg Really Make a Privacy-Friendly Facebook?
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 6 years ago on
March 8, 2019

Share

SAN FRANCISCO — After building a social network that turned into a surveillance system, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg says he’s shifting his company’s focus to messaging services designed to serve as fortresses of privacy.

Facebook has weathered more than two years of turbulence for repeated privacy lapses, spreading disinformation, allowing Russian agents to conduct targeted propaganda campaigns and a rising tide of hate speech and abuse.

Instead of just being the network that connects everyone, Facebook wants to encourage small groups of people to carry on encrypted conversations that neither Facebook nor any other outsider can read. It also plans to let messages automatically disappear, a feature pioneered by its rival Snapchat that could limit the risks posed by a trail of social media posts that follow people throughout their lives.

It’s a major bet by Zuckerberg, who sees it as a way to push Facebook more firmly into a messaging market that’s growing faster than its main social networking business. It might also help Facebook ward off government regulators, although the Facebook CEO made clear that he expects the company’s messaging business to complement, not replace, its core businesses.

But there are plenty of obstacles. Facebook has weathered more than two years of turbulence for repeated privacy lapses, spreading disinformation, allowing Russian agents to conduct targeted propaganda campaigns and a rising tide of hate speech and abuse. Zuckerberg submitted to two days of grilling on Capitol Hill last April. All that increases the challenge of convincing users that Facebook really means it about privacy this time.

Vacuuming up People’s Information in Every Possible Way

Encrypted conversations could alleviate some of those problems, but it could make others worse. Security is an “admirable goal,” said Forrester Research analyst Fatemeh Khatibloo. “I’m just not sure it addresses the bigger issues Facebook is facing right now.”

Facebook grew into a colossus by vacuuming up people’s information in every possible way and dissecting it to shoot targeted ads back at them. Anything that jeopardizes that machine could pose a major threat to the company’s share price, which would also affect its ability to attract and retain talented engineers and other employees.

In a Wednesday interview with The Associated Press, Zuckerberg predicted Facebook’s emphasis on privacy will do more to help the company’s business than hurt it. While most of the stock market slipped in Wednesday trading, Facebook’s shares gained $1.25 to close at $172.51.

The Facebook CEO has been telegraphing some of these changes to investors for the past six months, but his Wednesday blog post is the first time he has explained the idea to the more than two billion people that use Facebook’s services and look at its ads. Those ads are expected to generate $67 billion in revenue this year, according to the research firm eMarketer.

If everything falls into place, Facebook will also display similar advertising on the privacy-protected messaging services. Those services are also likely to offer other moneymaking features, such as a digital wallet, as Facebook attempts to build something similar to Tencent’s popular WeChat service in Asia.

Unraveling Facebook Could Become More Difficult

“If you think about your life, you probably spend more time communicating privately than publicly,” Zuckerberg said during the AP interview. “The overall opportunity here is a lot larger than what we have built in terms of Facebook and Instagram.”

“If you think about your life, you probably spend more time communicating privately than publicly. The overall opportunity here is a lot larger than what we have built in terms of Facebook and Instagram.” — Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg 

That’s far from proven. While Facebook has already tried to show ads in the Messenger app, it’s seen only limited success. It hasn’t even tested the concept in WhatsApp since it acquired that service for $22 billion in 2014.

“There are some huge unknowns about how successful Facebook is going to be rolling advertising into a more private messaging environment,” said eMarketer analyst Debra Aho Williamson.

Some critics are convinced that Facebook has become so powerful — even a threat to democracy as well as to people’s privacy — that it needs to be reined in by tougher regulations or even a corporate breakup.

But unraveling Facebook could become more difficult if Zuckerberg can successfully stitch together the messaging services behind an encrypted wall.

“I see that as the goal of this entire thing,” said Blake Reid, a University of Colorado law professor who specializes in technology and policy. He said Facebook could tell antitrust authorities that WhatsApp, Instagram Direct and Facebook Messenger are tied so tightly together that it couldn’t unwind them.

Facebook’s Focus on Messaging Privacy Raises Other Concerns

Combining the three services also lets Facebook build more complete data profiles on all of its users. Already, businesses can already target Facebook and Instagram users with the same ads, and marketing campaigns are likely coming to WhatsApp eventually.

Facebook’s focus on messaging privacy raises other concerns. Messaging apps have in the past helped fake news and rumors spread fast, sometimes with deadly consequences. A report from University of Oxford researchers last year found evidence of widespread disinformation campaigns on chat applications like WhatsApp. In one particularly brutal example, the Indian government last year accused WhatsApp of fueling rumors that led to lynchings and mob violence that wounded dozens.

Facebook responded by restricting the number of groups to which a message could be forwarded and labeling forwarded messages as such. On Wednesday, Zuckerberg said that Facebook needs to protect both privacy and safety as it encrypted messaging services, although he noted to an “inherent trade-off” between security and safety, simply because Facebook won’t be able to read encrypted conversations.

And in some cases, Facebook could allow some content to automatically disappear in a day or two, as if it were a fleeting mirage.

“Some people want to store their messages forever and some people think having large collections of photos or messages is a liability as much as it is an asset,” Zuckerberg told the AP. “Figuring out the balance is a really important one.”

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Arrest Felon on Probation After Finding Concealed Gun

DON'T MISS

What Does It Mean for Biden’s Prostate Cancer to Be ‘Aggressive’? A Urologic Surgeon Explains

DON'T MISS

Wired Wednesday: As Gold Hits Record High, People Cash In

DON'T MISS

Netanyahu Says Israel Probably Killed Hamas Leader Mohammed Sinwar

DON'T MISS

California Cop Was Partying at Festival While Collecting $600,000 for Fake Injury

DON'T MISS

Attorney: Fresno Unified Needs to Find ‘Nearest Exit’ in Defamation Lawsuit

DON'T MISS

Trump Presses False ‘Genocide’ Narrative in Tense Meeting With South African Leader

DON'T MISS

Here’s What to Expect at the Army’s 250th Anniversary Parade on Trump’s Birthday

DON'T MISS

Fresno EOC Spending Depleted $8 Million Reserve. Agency Needed $5 Million Loan to Survive

DON'T MISS

Defense Department Accepts Boeing 747 From Qatar for Trump’s Use

UP NEXT

California Cop Was Partying at Festival While Collecting $600,000 for Fake Injury

UP NEXT

This Is What’s Inside Trump’s ‘Beautiful’ Spending Package

UP NEXT

George Wendt, Who Played a Beloved Barfly on ‘Cheers,’ Dies at 76

UP NEXT

Why California’s Biggest Local Effort to Fight Homelessness Is Starting All Over Again

UP NEXT

GV Wire Takes Home 14 California News Reporting Awards

UP NEXT

Bubic’s 7 Shutout Innings and Pasquantino’s Homer Lift the Royals Over the Giants

UP NEXT

Should CA’s Climate Budget Pay for High-Speed Rail, Firefighters?

UP NEXT

CBS News President McMahon to Step Down, Memo Shows

UP NEXT

One Killed in ‘Intentional’ Explosion Outside Palm Springs Fertility Clinic, Police Say

UP NEXT

Police and Firefighters Respond to an Explosion Rocking the California City of Palm Springs

Netanyahu Says Israel Probably Killed Hamas Leader Mohammed Sinwar

51 minutes ago

California Cop Was Partying at Festival While Collecting $600,000 for Fake Injury

53 minutes ago

Attorney: Fresno Unified Needs to Find ‘Nearest Exit’ in Defamation Lawsuit

1 hour ago

Trump Presses False ‘Genocide’ Narrative in Tense Meeting With South African Leader

2 hours ago

Here’s What to Expect at the Army’s 250th Anniversary Parade on Trump’s Birthday

2 hours ago

Fresno EOC Spending Depleted $8 Million Reserve. Agency Needed $5 Million Loan to Survive

2 hours ago

Defense Department Accepts Boeing 747 From Qatar for Trump’s Use

2 hours ago

Hundreds Attend Measure C Meeting. Will Their Voices Be Heard?

2 hours ago

Defense Department Accepts Boeing 747 From Qatar for Trump’s Use

2 hours ago

Wall Street Stocks Slip as Treasury Yields Rise on Worries About Trump Tax Cuts

3 hours ago

Fresno Police Arrest Felon on Probation After Finding Concealed Gun

A man on probation for a prior weapons conviction was arrested after Fresno police say they found a concealed firearm during a traffic stop ...

14 minutes ago

Fresno Police arrested a man on probation after finding a concealed firearm during a traffic stop near Belmont Avenue and Parkway Drive. (Fresno PD)
14 minutes ago

Fresno Police Arrest Felon on Probation After Finding Concealed Gun

31 minutes ago

What Does It Mean for Biden’s Prostate Cancer to Be ‘Aggressive’? A Urologic Surgeon Explains

33 minutes ago

Wired Wednesday: As Gold Hits Record High, People Cash In

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference, in Jerusalem, May 21, 2025. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun/Pool
51 minutes ago

Netanyahu Says Israel Probably Killed Hamas Leader Mohammed Sinwar

53 minutes ago

California Cop Was Partying at Festival While Collecting $600,000 for Fake Injury

1 hour ago

Attorney: Fresno Unified Needs to Find ‘Nearest Exit’ in Defamation Lawsuit

2 hours ago

Trump Presses False ‘Genocide’ Narrative in Tense Meeting With South African Leader

2 hours ago

Here’s What to Expect at the Army’s 250th Anniversary Parade on Trump’s Birthday

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend