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This Week's Updates:
How Facebook Hosts an Advertising Black Market: On Monday, CfA's Tech Transparency Project (TTP) released a report exposing the black market for Facebook Business Manager accounts—hosted on Facebook itself. TTP identified over 100 Facebook pages where Business Manager accounts were being bought and sold - an open violation Meta's own policy, which forbids such transactions. These accounts are approved to post ads across Meta's platforms, and can be used to circulate scams, misinformation, and even political advertisements.
The groups documented in the report were also being used to sell packages of stolen or falsified documents, including IDs, Social Security cards, and utility bills. These documents allow users to create new Business Manager accounts, under different names and addresses.
Google Settles in Big Privacy Case: This week, Google paid $392 million to 40 states for violating consumer protection laws and misleading users about the data it was collecting from them. Even when users asked not to be tracked, Google was keeping tabs on their location through other apps. TTP investigated a similar loophole earlier this year, which allowed Google's Android users to discreetly track the location of another Android device
TTP Research Cited in Facebook Lawsuit, HSGAC Report: TTP's report titled White Supremacist Groups Are Thriving on Facebookwas recently cited in a lawsuit brought against Meta by the family of Reverend Clementa Pickney, who was murdered along with eight other black churchgoers by white supremacist Dylann Roof. That same research was also used to support the work of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Government Affairs (HSGAC), which released its own report on domestic extremism this Wednesday.
TTP's report demonstrated that Facebook had automatically generated pages for white supremacist hate groups, going so far as to link to their external websites. Both the Pickney family's lawsuit and the HSGAC report stress the role of social media in radicalization and hold Meta accountable for its failure to prioritize safety over user engagement.
What We're Reading:
4 Takeaways About Money in the Midterms
This midterm cycle is shaping up to be the most expensive one ever. While much of that spending is anonymous and untraceable, there are still interesting patterns emerging in campaign finance (as well as some hope for transparency reforms).
Amazon warehouse speed goals linked to chronic injury, risk
Workers in Amazon warehouses are being injured at an unusually high rate, according to regulators in Washington State. Based on their inspections, the regulators pointed to the fast pace of work as a major driver of injuries, as well as the long hours worked by employees. In response, Amazon is appealing the decision and suing the state.
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