Facebook Faces Growing Privacy Protests
By wchung | 16 Jun, 2026
In this file photo taken April 21, 2010, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg delivers an address in San Francisco. In a news conference Wednesday, May 26, 2010, Zuckerberg said the company is making it easier for users to decline the instant personalization feature. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)
Facebook is simplifying its privacy controls amid growing unrest from many of its users.
Protesters have been organizing campaigns to quit Facebook and privacy groups have complained to regulators after Facebook announced new features last month, including “instant personalization” that tailors other websites to users’ Facebook profiles.
“A lot of people are upset with us,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg acknowledged at a news conference Wednesday.
One complaint has been over the fact that while Facebook allows users to hide their list of interests on their personal profile pages, the user would still show up elsewhere as “liking” that band, company or hobby. Zuckerberg said that under the simplified controls, privacy preferences will be extending to those other places as well.
Zuckerberg said the company is also making it easier for users to decline the instant personalization feature.
He said that as Facebook offered more granularity in its privacy choices, the settings have become so complex that many users simply avoided them and instead chose to share less. He said Facebook is trying to simplify the controls — and making them apply retroactively and to new services that have yet to launch.
Facebook said the changes will be rolled out in the coming weeks. It’s not yet clear whether the latest changes will quell user unease.
In a statement, the Center for Democracy and Technology, a Washington-based advocacy group, said that “while more work still needs to be done, these changes are the building blocks for giving people what they want and deserve.”
NEW YORK (AP)
Recent Articles
- Keiko Fujimori Edges Ahead in Brutal Contested Vote Count
- Chip Queen He Tingbo Subverts Moore's Law to Overturn the Global Semiconductor Hierarchy
- Only 30% of Americans Consider the US the World's Greatest Country
- US Spends $25,000 a Month to Store Unusable Contraceptives Stuck in Belgium
- AI Optical Parts Maker Zhongji Innolight Eyes $7 Billion Hong Kong Listing
- US-Iran Peace Deal Kicks the Can Down the Road
- Surging SpaceX Set to Overtake Amazon in Market Value
- US Annual Import Price Rise Highest in 4 Years
- Humbled Trump Points to 'No Nukes' Fig Leaf in Half-Baked Deal
- SpaceX Locks in $60 Billion Cursor Deal to Power AI Coding Push
