Facebook agrees to pay fine over Cambridge Analytica
The fight between Facebook and the UK government's data regulator over Cambridge Analytica has come to an end.
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The fight between Facebook and the UK government's data regulator over Cambridge Analytica has come to an end.
Internal emails released by Facebook on Friday show employees of the company expressed concerns about Cambridge Analytica's use of Facebook user data as early as September 2015.
Facebook sued a South Korean company on Friday for alleged misuse of Facebook data.
More than a year after the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook is cracking down on personality quizzes. Sort of.
This week started with Facebook wrongfully removing ads critical of Facebook and ended with the company failing to immediately catch and remove an apparent livestream of a deadly attack.
A former director of Cambridge Analytica, who visited WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange after the 2016 US presidential election, was subpoenaed by special counsel Robert Mueller's office and cooperated, according to her lawyer.
Washington, D.C., Attorney General Karl Racine is suing Facebook, accusing the social media giant of wide-ranging privacy violations.
Facebook's quarterly revenue and user growth disappointed investors amid a challenging year for a company navigating data misuse, misinformation and election meddling on its platform.
Facebook is taking steps to address criticism that its platform has been hijacked by bad actors, but investors are bailing.
1. Big Tech heads to Washington: Top brass from Twitter and Facebook will face off with members of Congress Wednesday.