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Facebook reaches out to banks, could gain access to users’ financial data

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WASHINGTON — Facebook is hoping to connect with America’s financial institutions — all in an effort to access its users’ financial data.

Over the past year, it has reportedly reached out to JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and U.S. Bank Corp, according to a report Monday from The Wall Street Journal. Included in the data it’s seeking: credit card transactions and checking account balances.

“The idea is to build services on top of its Facebook Messenger platform that would allow people to do things like check their account balance or get fraud alerts or things like that,” co-writer Deepa Seetharaman told WTOP’s Debra Feinstein and Mark Lewis Monday.

The social media giant is making the effort amid ongoing concerns about its ability to keep data private.

One of the more recent examples is from June, when a software glitch allowed some posts to be public. Facebook is also still dealing with the fallout from the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which the data-mining firm affiliated with President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign inappropriately accessed data from 87 million users.

“There are definitely some uneasy questions,” Seetharaman said. ” … We know at least one bank walked away from Facebook in the middle of some of these discussions, and this data privacy [issue] came up all the time.”

But amid that trepidation, there might still be temptation: Banks see mobile commerce as an area of opportunity.

“Messenger has over a billion users — it’s popular,” Seetharaman said. “That’s where your customers are. I think the banks are thinking, ‘Maybe we should be there, too.'”

Users who would opt in to such features would get “one-stop shop convenience,” Seetharaman said. “It’s the ability to not download another app,” she said, “and it’s the ability to do all of this kind of important financial checking account balance stuff on the side while you’re still talking to your friends.”

But the risk of providing that convenience apparently has been hard for these institutions to ignore, despite Facebook’s assurances that they’ve changed privacy standards and wouldn’t use the data for advertising.

“It’s so hard for them to kind of get through and break away from that image of being irresponsible with our data,” Seetharaman said.

The Journal reports that Google and Amazon have sought similar data, in hopes of providing banking applications for its Google Assistant and Alexa smart speakers.

Tech CEOs summoned to Congress for another hearing on social media’s risks for children

Social media CEOs once again are being called to testify before the Senate in light of mounting legal and public pressure to protect young users on their platforms. The leaders of Meta, Alphabet, TikTok and Snap were invited to testify next month before the Senate Judiciary Committee, a committee spokesperson confirmed Friday. The hearing comes at an inflection point for social media as court cases, proposed legislation and increased advocacy place mounting pressure on the tech companies behind these platforms to protect children and teens who use them by making material changes to how they operate. “Americans are realizing more and more every day that they cannot trust the CEOs at the helms of these companies because they do not put our safety first,” said Sacha Haworth, executive director of watchdog group The Tech Oversight Project. “If it feels like the pace is accelerating, it’s because it is.”
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