You may have heard some mixed reviews on Facebook recently. Mark Zuckerberg took the hot seat in Congress, the seat that Bill Gates of Microsoft, warmed up back before most Facebook employees were born.
The Verge, put some of the oddest and most awkward moments together for a quick and easy read. Poor Mr. Zuckerberg said that he was responsible for the breach of virtually the entire user base of Facebook's data but then said they didn't know and they did and there were timeline errors in between a bunch of apologetic non-apologies.
What did the representatives of Facebook users think?
Basically it came down to, as CNET said, the notion that Congress would love to regulate Facebook, but they don't have the will and won't find a way.
Congress can take some comfort from Harvard College, which back in the day, couldn't figure out what to do with Mark Zuckerberg either. They too agreed that doing nothing about his misbehavior was the path of least resistance and the shortest route through a bad publicity obstacle course.
Proxima Sales is watching the privacy hand-wringing more closely than some because Proxima Sales teams do a lot of business in the European Union. We have to play be their privacy rules in our EU offices and efforts and frankly we don't mind. The straight forward privacy policies and data ownership structures outlined in the EU GDPR -- Global Data Protection Regulation seem pretty reasonable to us.
The Verge, put some of the oddest and most awkward moments together for a quick and easy read. Poor Mr. Zuckerberg said that he was responsible for the breach of virtually the entire user base of Facebook's data but then said they didn't know and they did and there were timeline errors in between a bunch of apologetic non-apologies.
What did the representatives of Facebook users think?
Basically it came down to, as CNET said, the notion that Congress would love to regulate Facebook, but they don't have the will and won't find a way.
Congress can take some comfort from Harvard College, which back in the day, couldn't figure out what to do with Mark Zuckerberg either. They too agreed that doing nothing about his misbehavior was the path of least resistance and the shortest route through a bad publicity obstacle course.
Proxima Sales is watching the privacy hand-wringing more closely than some because Proxima Sales teams do a lot of business in the European Union. We have to play be their privacy rules in our EU offices and efforts and frankly we don't mind. The straight forward privacy policies and data ownership structures outlined in the EU GDPR -- Global Data Protection Regulation seem pretty reasonable to us.
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