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Author Topic: Mark Zuckerberg Agrees To Testify Before Congress Over Data Scandal  (Read 2955 times)

Offline Mr. Babatunde

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Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, has agreed to testify before the United States Congress in the wake of a  that has sent the company’s share price tumbling and prompted numerous investigations and lawsuits.

Zuckerberg has accepted an invitation to testify before the House energy and commerce committee, according to an aide familiar with the discussions. A date has not yet been set, and the spokesperson for the House committee declined to confirm reports that the hearing was scheduled for 12 April.

The Senate legal and business advisory groups have likewise welcomed Zuckerberg to show up at hearings. His choice to affirm before the US Congress was first detailed by CNN, and diverges from his refusal to show up before individuals from parliament in the UK.

The seat of a British advisory group of MPs on Tuesday said Zuckerberg's choice to send different administrators to the UK to answer inquiries for his benefit was "totally amazing".

In any case, news of US congressional confirmation makes ready for a noteworthy standoff for Zuckerberg, 33, who has gone under expanding weight from administrators and the overall population to represent Facebook's business hones since the organization recognized last September that it had sold promotions to Russian operators looking to impact the US presidential decision.

In October, Facebook sent its general counsel, Colin Stretch, to run the gauntlet of two days of congressional hearings while Zuckerberg travelled to China and shared photos of his Halloween costume on his Facebook profile.

But the clamor for a show of public accountability reached a fever pitch following the Observer’s reporting that the Facebook data of about 50 million Americans was acquired by the political data analytics firm Cambridge Analytica after being harvested by another company.

Five days after the story broke, Zuckerberg stepped out from behind his carefully curated Facebook profile – his typical mode of making public statements – to answer questions from a select group of media organizations.

In remarkably similar comments to CNN, the New York Times, Wired and tech website Recode, he said he would testify if he was the person at Facebook most knowledgable about the subject matter.

While Zuckerberg’s trip to Capitol Hill might mollify American officials, it will probably only increase the frustration of snubbed British MPs. Damian Collins, the chair of the parliamentary committee, which is investigating the effects of fake news on UK democracy, said: “I would certainly urge him to think again if he has any care for people that use his company’s services,” Collins said.










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