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New Social Media Transparency Bill Would Force Facebook To Open Up To Researchers (theverge.com) 22

A bipartisan group of US senators have announced a new bill that would require social media companies to share platform data with independent researchers. The Verge reports: The bill was announced Thursday by Democratic senators Chris Coons (D-DE), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and also Rob Portman (R-OH), a Republican. Named the Platform Accountability and Transparency Act (PATA), it would establish new rules compelling social media platforms to share data with "qualified researchers," defined as university-affiliated researchers pursuing projects that have been approved by the National Science Foundation (NSF). Under the terms of the bill, platforms would be bound to comply with requests for data once research was approved by the NSF. Failing to provide data to a qualifying project would result in the platform losing the immunities provided by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. "The PATA act is a truly comprehensive platform transparency proposal," said Laura Edelson, a PhD candidate at NYU Tandon School of Engineering and lead researcher at NYU's Cybersecurity for Democracy project, in an email to The Verge. "If passed this legislation would provide a real pathway for researchers to better understand online harms and start coming up with solutions."
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New Social Media Transparency Bill Would Force Facebook To Open Up To Researchers

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  • gee willickers (Score:2, Insightful)

    by grave367 ( 6314720 )
    Another Cambridge Analytica sequel.

    Only this time it'll be legislated to make sure only "qualified researchers" have the data.
  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Friday December 10, 2021 @07:58PM (#62068127)

    Facebook is a private company worth close to a $1T. Do you seriously think it will listen to external researchers because of some perceived harms?

    • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

      Facebook is a private company worth close to a $1T. Do you seriously think it will listen to external researchers because of some perceived harms?

      Why do so many people think that companies are above or beyond the law? Let me help you with this. If the government told facebook by passing a law that told it to listen to external researchers, guess what is going to happen? Facebook, or any company, is going to do exactly what its told.

      Of course they might challenge this law in court but if the courts uphold it, they will follow the law. Corporations exist at the whelm of governments. They will follow the law or they will cease to exist as a corp

  • Interesting that this only applies to websites which have ads. Though I generally disapprove of this type of legislation, it has the faint whiff of being on our side.
  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Friday December 10, 2021 @09:34PM (#62068335)

    Facebook has repeatedly shown that it can't do the right thing & consistently makes bad decisions, i.e. those that put profits ahead of any considerations of harm done to its users, so now it's time to at least have some reasonably objective analysis to publicly tell them what they're doing wrong & possibly offer some solutions to fix it. So does this mean that the tax payer is stepping in to pay for experts to do Facebook's job for them? Well, Zuckerberg, it looks like they don't like your style & they can block you.

    And any of you ninnies that are going to start braying about 'freedumbs' & the gubbermint invading your privacy, please note that some years ago Edward Snowden revealed that the NSA, among others, are already paying Facebook for unfettered access & custom developed search tools to all Facebook's user data anyway.

  • Governments demanding tech companies (and not just Facebook) hand over their data seems to becoming more and more common these days. What I don't get is why these seizures don't count (in the US at least) as "private property be taken for public use" under the 5th amendment, requiring "just compensation" for the market value of said data. Many companies' data sets, after all, are likely more valuable than the land the company physically sits on. And the seizure of that data amounts to as much or more of

    • If Biden can take a Landlord's right to evict non-paying tenant without tripping over the 5th amendment's "taking" clause, what chance does your "taking" data have?

  • Unconstitutional and actually evil. You cannot constitutionally give researchers access to this data without running afoul of the first amendment's rule you cannot privilege some speakers over others.
  • For targeted ads, I want to see ALL data contributing to targeting, and exactly who provided it. The origin and full chain of custody, not just the name of some advertising intermediary.

    Did my grocery store tell them what I just bought?

    I want to know about every single time that happens, so I can yell at every business that does it.

Somebody ought to cross ball point pens with coat hangers so that the pens will multiply instead of disappear.

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