Meta

Upholding Our Commitment to Protecting Your Privacy: What the FTC Gets Wrong

Takeaways

  • The FTC’s latest complaint against Meta is a political stunt. It’s a clear attempt to usurp the authority of Congress to set industry-wide standards and instead single out one American company while allowing Chinese companies like TikTok to operate without constraint on American soil. 
  • The FTC does not have the authority to unilaterally impose “do-overs” on court-approved, negotiated settlements. Even one of the agency’s Democratic Commissioners expressed doubt about whether the FTC has the authority to take the action it proposed today.
  • To justify imposing brand new obligations that have no basis in the agreement or the alleged violations, the FTC is relying on years-old incidents that we fully disclosed and fixed ourselves — in some instances, even before the order was originally finalized. 
  • Since 2019, we’ve overhauled our approach to privacy, investing $5 billion in a rigorous privacy program that protects people’s privacy by identifying privacy risks early and embedding privacy into our products from the start.

Today, in what could only be described as a political stunt, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) accused us of not adequately protecting people’s privacy based on events that occurred and were disclosed years ago and an assessment which looked at just the first six months of a 20-year agreement. None of these issues warrant the drastic changes the FTC is seeking just three years into our decades-long agreement–and that the FTC lacks unilateral authority to impose. We have not violated the agreement and operate an industry-leading privacy program. 

The timing is striking. These events occurred years ago, and we continuously update the FTC, yet today’s action comes without any opportunity for us to address their concerns. In fact, this action was brought just before an independent assessor was scheduled to update them on our compliance work and program enhancements we made over the past two years — yet the FTC chose to proceed without waiting to hear the results of that work. The action also comes after the Commision lost its bipartisan membership, and extraordinarily, even one of the remaining Democratic FTC Commissioners has already publicly questioned the FTC’s authority for the relief it is seeking. 

We are focused on working productively with the agency to protect peoples’ privacy, but such gamesmanship suggests an agency more focused on getting headlines than protecting Americans’ privacy.

Let’s be clear about what the FTC is trying to do: usurp the authority of Congress to set industry-wide standards and instead single out one American company while allowing Chinese companies, like TikTok, to operate without constraint on American soil. FTC Chair Lina Khan’s insistence on using any measure — however baseless — to antagonize American business has reached a new low.

The FTC’s Latest Action Ignores Key Facts

Privacy has been and remains our priority. We work with the FTC, not only in the interest of being extremely transparent with them but also to ensure that we’re engaging with them regularly as we work to protect peoples’ privacy and constantly improve our program. We have fully cooperated with the Assessor in its continuous monitoring of our program, as they have recognized, and we cooperate fully with the FTC in responding to their inquiries about the Order.

Pursuing actions like this with little or no engagement with companies about what their concerns are and without any indication of non-compliance before seeking to unilaterally reopen a negotiated Order, sends a chilling message to all American businesses about how to work with the FTC productively on these very important issues. We have spent vast resources building and implementing an industry-leading privacy program under the terms of our FTC agreement and will continue to prioritize our work to improve it because privacy isn’t something that is ever “done” for us, it’s part of what we do. 

We will vigorously fight this action and expect to prevail.