Facebook: user data is not absolutely secure

Facebook, in the words of its founder Zuckerberg, said that its users' data cannot be completely safe. In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, the CEO of Facebook explained that the investigation launched by the group, after the scandal associated with the alleged abuses of Cambridge Analytica will help identify and discourage those who act against its rules, but it will not 'able to understand where all the data used without the consent of over 50 million people has gone. Facebook will analyze tens of thousands of apps that have collected a flood of data, an effort that could cost "many millions of dollars", explained the CEO. “Like any security precautionary measure, this is not a bulletproof solution. It's not that every process per se always leads to discovering every single thing "but it will act as a deterrent to stop developers from" doing bad things "and understanding what data has been abused. "The point of what we are trying to do is to make it much more difficult for anyone to misuse data." Zuckerberg reiterated his openness to greater regulation on online advertising: "There is no reason why the internet advertising sector should have lower transparency standards than that of advertising or print media", he added in the interview with the WSJ. At the Nasdaq, Facebook is on intraday lows (-3% to $ 159,67) and is preparing to file a week down by about 13%.

Facebook: user data is not absolutely secure