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Apple Says It's Banning Facebook's Research App That Collects Users' Personal Information (recode.net) 109

Facebook is at the center of another privacy scandal -- and this time it hasn't just angered users. It has also angered Apple. From a report: The short version: Apple says Facebook broke an agreement it made with Apple by publishing a "research" app for iPhone users that allowed the social giant to collect all kinds of personal data about those users, TechCrunch reported Tuesday. The app allowed Facebook to track users' app history, their private messages and their location data. Facebook's research effort reportedly targeted users as young as 13 years old.

As of last summer, apps that collect that kind of data are against Apple's privacy guidelines. That means Facebook couldn't make this research app available through the App Store, which would have required Apple approval. Instead, Facebook apparently took advantage of Apple's "Developer Enterprise Program," which lets approved Apple partners, like Facebook, test and distribute apps specifically for their own employees. In those cases, the employees can use third-party services to download beta versions of apps that aren't available to the general public.
Update: The Verge reports: Apple has shut down Facebook's ability to distribute internal iOS apps, from early releases of the Facebook app to basic tools like a lunch menu. A person familiar with the situation tells The Verge that early versions of Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and other pre-release "dogfood" (beta) apps have stopped working, as have other employee apps, like one for transportation. Facebook is treating this as a critical problem internally, we're told, as the affected apps simply don't launch on employees' phones anymore. Update 2: Apple says it shut down Facebook's app before the social company could voluntarily shut it down -- contrary to an earlier statement by Facebook, in which it said it was shutting down the app.
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Apple Says It's Banning Facebook's Research App That Collects Users' Personal Information

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Anything associated with Facebook should be banned. Facebook is a company not interested in protecting their users they only want to exploit them for monetary gain.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      #deletefacebook, its a platform designed to abuse and dehumanise people as data. It has been weaponised since the beginning when Zuck the Cuck used it as a stalking tool, and progressed to unlicensed unethical mood manipulation research on at risk teens amid soaring youth suicide. It enabled a lot of organised crime too, Facebook is in that category #deletefacebook

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Wednesday January 30, 2019 @10:04AM (#58045360)
    ... the worse Facebook looks.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Apple should have pulled Facebook's development certificates for Facebook as a whole

      I think that's exactly what has happened, as evidenced by Apple's statement : Any developer using their enterprise certificates to distribute apps to consumers will have their certificates revoked, which is what we did in this case to protect our users and their data."

      • by Altus ( 1034 )

        The enterprise cert is distinct from the App Store cert... I'm not sure if apple nuked the enterprise cert but it sure seems like facebook is still in the App Store.

    • Facebook will have joined two separate programs: The normal "developer" program, where they pay $99 a year just like every other developer, and the "enterprise" program, where they pay $299 a year for a program that plays by different rules: No review by Apple, the apps don't go on the App Store, and the enterprise must make sure that the app _only_ gets installed on devices belonging to the company.

      Their enterprise account just got nuked (their Enterprise certificate probably got revoked, which kills al
      • These days, Apple’s rules allow a single company to operate multiple developer accounts. It’s possible and likely that this Facebook Research app was being signed by a separate account than e.g. the internal corporate apps that Facebook undoubtedly uses.
    • Nuking the enterprise cert is going to give Facebook some pain, making it harder to beta-test apps and harder to use iphones for internal applications, but it's likely to be manageable pain.

      Nuking the facebook app from the appstore would likely to significant damage to both Apple and Facebook.

  • by BringsApples ( 3418089 ) on Wednesday January 30, 2019 @10:13AM (#58045404)
    You're not using Facebook, you work for Facebook. Spread that message to others, please.
  • Well (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DaMattster ( 977781 ) on Wednesday January 30, 2019 @10:14AM (#58045414)
    Maybe the powers that be will finally take notice and start regulating privacy and big data. But more than likely, nothing will become of this. At least Apple slapped down Facebook like a mosquito.
  • Facebook is treating this as a critical problem internally, we're told, as the affected apps simply don't launch on employees' phones anymore.

    So forget the Facebook VPN scandal for a moment here. Apple can, at their whim, make an application not work on your device. That's dangerous. The economic damage one company could do by simply revoking a critical app could outstrip the impact of the 9/11 attacks.

    We absolutely must not allow companies to wield this kind of power. Amazon should not be able to revoke e-book licenses, Apple and Microsoft and Google should not be able to revoke application licenses, etc. Imagine if they chose to do it to a

  • From time to time a cable channel will spar with a provider, think TBS vs TimeWarner or whatever. Each one thinks their customer base will forgo the other one. In this case, lets say that Apple went full nuclear on FB and just stopped their app entirely. "Dear Apple iPhone user, you have 30 days then FB app stops working" I really wonder what people would trade, their iPhone or FB.

    I think FB is like cable TV, people waste an inordinate amount of time on it, think they are dependent, but just like when

  • "Facebook is treating this as a critical problem internally, we're told, as the affected apps simply don't launch on employees' phones anymore."

    If they were not repeat offenders against user privacy and Apple's store policies, they might not get treated like this.

    But they are and they do.

  • Facebook's "research app"? You mean Facebook?

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