You know it's a good day at Facebook when the words "teenagers,Ashley Lopez Archives" "research," and "lying" are in the news.
In January, an investigation from TechCrunch found that Facebook was paying people, including teenagers, $20 to monitor their internet and phone use.
SEE ALSO: Facebook paid teens to install an app to spy on their internet and phone useAt the time, Facebook said that less than 5 percent of its study participants were teens, and that participants under 18 were required to get parental consent. But now, Facebook has revealed that teens comprised 18 percent of its users — not five.
After TechCrunch's investigation, Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) asked Facebook for more information about the program; Warner was reportedly frustrated with Facebook's lack of transparency regarding its research programs.
TechCrunch has obtained Facebook's response to Sen. Warner's questions. And the company's answers regarding teenage users tell a different story than Facebook's initial response to the media.
Not only did teenage users comprise 18 percent of participants, but teens were not required to get written letters of parental consent, as Facebook previously asserted, either.
That five percent number apparently came from the amount of teenage users active in the program at the time that revelations about the initiative came to light. But over the research app's lifetime, 18 percent of the users were teens. Facebook listed these discrepancies in the letter's introduction to Warner. From the document posted by TechCrunch:
At the time we ended the Facebook Research App on Apple's iOS platform, less than 5 percent of the people sharing data with us through this program were teens. Analysis shows that number is about 18 percent when you look at the complete lifetime of the program, and also add people who had become inactive and uninstalled the app.
Each user was required to complete a clear consent flow prior to participation. Potential participants were required to confirm that they were over 18 or provide other evidence of parental consent, though the vendors did not require a signed parental consent form for teen users.
The report was initially troubling for a few reasons beyond the creep factor of Facebook monitoring teenagers' activities. Facebook circumvented many of Apple's iOS privacy policies to gain unfettered access to participants' phone usage, which resulted in the app getting booted from iOS. Further, Facebook recruited in teen-populated places like Snapchat, which implied that it was specifically looking in places known for teen users. And, Facebook often initially obscured its identity as the proprietor of the study by working through intermediaries.
SEE ALSO: Facebook isn't sorry about its shady 'research' appFacebook says that it is working hard to regain trust from its users, after multiple scandals and breaches have damaged that trust. But discrepancies like these undermine faith that the tech giant is truly trying to make good. And frankly, none of us are shocked.
Topics Facebook Social Media
The entire 'Star Wars' film library is coming to cable TVHappy Birthday, Roald Dahl: Here's what your characters would look like as real peopleHere's how to get the most out of the new 'Pokémon Go' buddy updateHeroic driver rescues 20 children from her burning school busMarshawn Lynch and Bear Grylls: The survivalist bromance we never knew we neededMovie magic: This app brings your 'Star Wars' toys to life with special effectsIndulge your love for 'Poldark' with this epic coloring bookBuggy rollout hasn't hindered iOS 10 adoption, report saysManchester experiences epic storms, social media explodes with pics, videosCrazy satellite images show Super Typhoon Meranti swallowing tiny islandDon't put words in J.K. Rowling's mouth or she will Tweet you into oblivionDreamHack is coming to Austin, Atlanta and Denver in 2017Today in You Are Old: Shaq's son vs. Ron Artest's son in high school hoopsPlease do your best to avoid the huge moon balloon rolling through ChinaNew iPhone 7 ad is dark and scaryAll the best reactions to Apple's brand new emojiBudding soccer star Christian Pulisic is America's saving graceMum makes heartbreaking plea in video about her son's deathLifelike Tom Brady mask is straight out of Roger Goodell's fever dreamsVolvo will hand over this self What Would Shirley Hazzard Do? by Brigitta Olubas Young, Queer, and Lonely in Paris by Sophie Yanow Cinema Hardly Exists: Duras and Godard in Conversation by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Blood, Bach, and Babel by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Haiku, Hearts, and Homes by The Paris Review Redux: The Feeling of an Airplane Crashing by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 23 by The Paris Review The Death of Max Jacob by Rosanna Warren Staff Picks: Rats, Rereaders, and Radio Towers by The Paris Review The Art of Distance No. 32 by The Paris Review The Later Work of Dorothea Tanning by Craig Morgan Teicher Allen Ginsberg at the End of America by Michael Schumacher Building Character: Writing a Backstory for Our AI by Mariana Lin David Hockney’s Portraits on Paper by The Paris Review Death’s Traffic Light Blinks Red by Cathy Park Hong Redux: X Sends Regards by The Paris Review Staff Picks: Trail Mix, Safe Sex, and Conversation Scenes from a Favela by The Paris Review Our Interminable Election Eve by Jonah Goldman Kay The Rings of Sebald by Daniel Mendelsohn
2.0714s , 8222.9765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Ashley Lopez Archives】,New Knowledge Information Network