Facebook shared data with Chinese phone makers: report

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

has data-sharing pacts with at least four Chinese companies including that has been flagged by agencies as a national security threat, a media report has claimed.

The agreements date back to 2010, but the deal would end by the weekend, said.

Facebook has data-sharing partnerships with Huawei, Lenovo, and TCL, which gave these Chinese companies private access to certain user data, the daily said.

"The deals were part of an effort to push more mobile users onto the starting in 2007, before stand-alone Facebook apps worked well on phones.

"The agreements allowed device makers to offer some Facebook features, such as address books, 'like' buttons and status updates," the daily said.

Top American lawmakers expressed concern over such an agreement by Facebook with Chinese companies.

"The that Facebook provided privileged access to Facebook's (Application Programming Interface) to Chinese device makers like and raises legitimate concerns, and I look forward to learning more about how Facebook ensured that information about their users was not sent to Chinese servers," Senator Mark Warner, of the on Intelligence said.

"Concerns about Huawei aren't new they were widely publicised beginning in 2012, when the on Intelligence released a well-read report on the close relationships between the and equipment makers like Huawei," Warner said.

Senators and Bill Nelson, who respectively serve as the and ranking member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, pressed Facebook for answers following the NYT report that Facebook offered numerous manufacturers special access to private user information.

Citing ongoing efforts by the committee to oversee Facebook data privacy and security practices, the two Senators in a letter to Zuckerberg seek details about his congressional testimony related to user control of personal information, efforts by Facebook to ensure business partner compliance with privacy policies, data storage and retention practices, disclosures to the Federal Trade Commission, and the identities of manufacturers who partnered with Facebook to receive special access.

According to an advisory last month, personnel on US military bases can no longer buy phones and other gear manufactured by Chinese firms Huawei and ZTE, after the said the devices pose an "unacceptable" security risk.

"Huawei and devices may pose an unacceptable risk to (military) personnel, information and mission," has said last month.

Huawei, one of the largest manufacturers in the world, was the recipient of billions of dollars in lines of credit from China's state-owned policy banks, helping to fuel its overseas expansion in Africa, and Latin America, the daily said.

Its founder is a former in the People's Liberation Army, it added.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 06 2018. 10:20 IST