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Mark Zuckerberg

Zuckerberg's Plea: Regulate Me Before I Violate People's Privacy Again!

Facebook would prosper in a less robust market.

Thomas W. Hazlett | 4.17.2019 7:00 AM

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Mark Zuckerberg | Stephen Lam/REUTERS/Newscom
(Stephen Lam/REUTERS/Newscom)

Hackers and scammers are running amok while social media platforms are harvesting our precious personal information for profit.

Sen. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.) warns that "Facebook can't be trusted to protect users' data on its own." Yet Wyden's bid to hold their feet to the fire—"It's time for Congress to step in"—barely lights a match. Facebook executives long ago called for government oversight, and CEO Mark Zuckerberg has doubled down on this hand in a Washington Post op-ed.

A reform bill by the Oregon senator would pump up the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), authorizing new staff and a big jump in potential fines for violations of law—up to 4 percent of annual revenues. The "tiny" penalties now in place, says Wyden, "are not a credible deterrent." Perhaps the FTC boost would improve customer knowledge. But it is close to an email phishing scam to argue that these measures will supply the strong consumer protection we need.

While Congress has been holding hearings, poking tech execs, and dancing the legislative Fandango, the marketplace has imposed actual sanctions. Between the time Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal was revealed, March of last year, and March of this year, shareholders lost more than $61.6 billion adjusted for overall market (NASDAQ) fluctuations. In contrast, Sen. Wyden's 4 percent fine—even if applied to global sales, and instantly—would whack just $2.2 billion from the Facebook moguls.

The equity tumble focused their minds. In 2018, CNN proclaimed: "Facebook is facing an existential crisis." Bumbling though Zuckerberg and COO Sheryl Sandberg may have been, they adjusted privacy settings, banned many third-party apps, and required more information from advertisers. They bought extra cybersecurity.

It is not clear where the optimal privacy protections lie, but these three things are clear.

First, Facebook is highly motivated to avoid another "existential crisis" wherein scores of billion dollar fines are imposed by markets.

Second, internet users continue to happily trade personal data for "free" social media apps. In recent laboratory experiments, Facebook users were offered money to disengage. By the prices demanded by the participants, the consumer value generated by Facebook was revealed to average about $1,000 per user per year. Regulations that limit the development of such platforms may hurt consumers as well as shareholders—and the former far more than the latter.

Third, Congress protecting our privacy…you're joking, right? In 2014 and 2015, hackers deployed by the Chinese government snuck onto U.S. government servers and helped themselves to extensive records on over 20 million Americans. The Office of Personnel Management had stored employee files unencrypted, leaving the data muffins warm and delicious. Millions lost their Social Security numbers, medical histories, and fingerprints to cyber thieves.

Amazingly, victims were kept in the dark. "The U.S. Government did not inform these victims of the appropriation for months, and never of its extent," writes The New York Times' David Sanger. The government's "only compensation was to offer a year's worth of credit report monitoring—fairly useless, given that the data thief was a state actor that apparently had (and likely still has) other crimes or compromises in mind." Former National Security Agency Chief James Clapper sarcastically congratulated Beijing: "You kind of have to salute the Chinese for what they did." Clapper testified that the massive data breach did not constitute an "attack" on U.S. citizens, but was simply part of the espionage game.

It is notable that Europe's "tough" rule imposed last May—the General Protection of Data Regulation (GDPR)—is proving a roadblock to smaller media platforms. The Los Angeles Times and many other news outlets went dark in Europe to avoid the costs of compliance. Facebook and Google also absorbed new costs—Google disclosed that it spent $100 million—but their share of online advertising has substantially increased from trend, as smaller platforms are plummeting with the new procedures imposed.

This GDPR approach is now on Mark Zuckerberg's timeline, but it is a sponsored endorsement. Facebook would clearly prosper were there more government for its competitors to deal with, and less robust market discipline for itself.

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NEXT: Brickbat: Forget the Hands, Here's a Finger

Thomas W. Hazlett is Hugh H. Macaulay Endowed Professor of Economics at Clemson University. His most recent book is The Political Spectrum: The Tumultuous Liberation of Wireless Technology, from Herbert Hoover to the Smart Phone (Yale University Press).

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  1. jhunosol   6 years ago

    like Brenda responded I'm shocked that a stay at home mom able to earn $7047 in one month on the computer. have you read this web site....www.geosalary.com

  2. jhunosol   6 years ago

    I am blown away that a student able to earn 5519 dollars in a few weeks on the internet.... So I started--->> http://www.geosalary.com

  3. Conchfritters   6 years ago

    Fuck Facebook and fuck your Instagram, but for fuck sake, if you know the rules, you sign up anyways, what the hell is there to discuss?

    To quote my favorite line from Airplane, in this case for people who have a Facebook whatever:

    “They bough their tickets, they knew what they were getting into. I say, let them crash!”

    1. Last of the Shitlords   6 years ago

      He wants Facebook to become a de facto utility. Then it will be protected and competition kept down.

      I’ve been saying this to anyone who will listen. Keep Facebook unregulated and it will eventually fall like MySpace did after the kids abandoned it.

  4. Rockabilly   6 years ago

    How will I know that the facebook has violated me if the goober mint doesn't regulate the facebook, which I can only join voluntarily?

  5. My Dog Bites Better Than Yours   6 years ago

    The farmer is following the fox's advice on modern hen house security.

    1. Wanderer   6 years ago

      Nice summary

  6. Sevo   6 years ago

    "...Second, internet users continue to happily trade personal data for “free” social media apps...."

    Don't use or care about FB, or any other 'social media', but those who do have a simple method of keeping them from 'stealing' date:
    Quit using them.

  7. Some Links - Cafe Hayek   6 years ago

    […] My former GMU colleague Tom Hazlett riffs on Mark Zuckerberg’s call for more regulation by gov…. A slice: […]

  8. Gozer the Gozarian   6 years ago

    Anytime you see a corporation asking for regulation, you are seeing cronyism manifest.

    Can't have cronyism without the government! This has nothing to do with consumer protections.

    So how is that "Do Not Call" registry working out? Yeah, that's what I thought.

  9. Rufus The Monocled   6 years ago

    Zuckerberg is a punk. Like Dorsey. Punks with power.

    He's acting a little like Stern*. They were all cool making their bones free of bull shit but the second they made their cash they submit and say, 'I'm good. You can do whatever you want now....for the children.'

    *Stern refuses to weigh in on free speech issues corroding the comedic craft.

  10. Rich   6 years ago

    Sen. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.) warns that “Facebook can’t be trusted to protect users’ data on its own.”

    "We should involve a Trusted Government Agency like OPM."

  11. Fuck You, Twitch | (no longer) pick3d last   6 years ago

    […] those that are too afraid to make judgment calls based on the situation. Just look at Zuckerberg begging the government to increase regulations on him so he doesn’t have to make the tough decisions himself (and […]

  12. Facebook Admits To Uploading Contacts of 1.5 Million Users Without Permission – 53percenter's Blog   6 years ago

    […] as a Reason headline put those calls for government intervention more succinctly: “Zuckerberg’s […]

  13. Facebook Admits To Uploading Contacts of 1.5 Million Users Without Permission | | U.S. Breaking News   6 years ago

    […] as a Reason headline put those calls for government intervention more succinctly: “Zuckerberg’s […]

  14. Facebook Admits To Uploading Contacts of 1.5 Million Users Without Permission • Just Conservative Views   6 years ago

    […] as a Reason headline put those calls for government intervention more succinctly: “Zuckerberg’s Plea: […]

  15. Hazlett on Facebook and Privacy, by David Henderson – Entrepreneur Investor News   6 years ago

    […] paragraph is from Thomas Hazlett, “Zuckerberg’s Plea: Regulate Me Before I Violate People’s Privacy Again!”, Reason, April […]

  16. Hazlett on Facebook and Privacy, by David Henderson - Nagaland Jackpot Teer Result News   6 years ago

    […] paragraph is from Thomas Hazlett, “Zuckerberg’s Plea: Regulate Me Before I Violate People’s Privacy Again!”, Reason, April […]

  17. Hazlett on Facebook and Privacy, by David Henderson – Focal News   6 years ago

    […] paragraph is from Thomas Hazlett, “Zuckerberg’s Plea: Regulate Me Before I Violate People’s Privacy Again!”, Reason, April […]

  18. Hazlett on Facebook and Privacy, by David Henderson – CNB Reports   6 years ago

    […] paragraph is from Thomas Hazlett, “Zuckerberg’s Plea: Regulate Me Before I Violate People’s Privacy Again!”, Reason, April […]

  19. Will Trump’s Authoritarian Impulses Derail His Deregulatory Successes? – iftttwall   6 years ago

    […] Facebook and other social media platforms—something that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is all too eager for—and has floated the idea of nationalizing the rollout of 5G telecommunications technology, […]

  20. Will Trump's Authoritarian Impulses Derail His Deregulatory Successes? - G20 Intel   6 years ago

    […] Facebook and other social media platforms—something that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is all too eager for—and has floated the idea of nationalizing the rollout of 5G telecommunications […]

  21. Will Trump’s Authoritarian Impulses Derail His Deregulatory Successes? – ALibertarian.org   6 years ago

    […] Facebook and other social media platforms—something that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is all too eager for—and has floated the idea of nationalizing the rollout of 5G telecommunications […]

  22. Will Trump’s Authoritarian Impulses Derail His Deregulatory Successes? – Michigan Standard   6 years ago

    […] Facebook and other social media platforms—something that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is all too eager for—and has floated the idea of nationalizing the rollout of 5G telecommunications technology, […]

  23. Will Trump's Authoritarian Impulses Derail His Deregulatory Successes? | Libertarian Party of Alabama Unofficial   6 years ago

    […] Facebook and other social media platforms—something that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is all too eager for—and has floated the idea of nationalizing the rollout of 5G telecommunications technology, […]

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