Ahead of Zuckerberg's testimony, Sen. John Kennedy says privacy is "too big for Facebook to fix"

Sen. Kennedy says some problems might be too big for Facebook to fix

Sen. John Kennedy, R-Louisiana, says problems arising from the failure to protect users' privacy on social media are "too big" for Facebook and CEO Mark Zuckerberg to fix. The company is reeling from a privacy scandal over its data collection policies following the revelation that political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica obtained data on as many as 87 million Facebook users.

Kennedy, who will be one of the lawmakers questioning Zuckerberg at one of his two hearings scheduled for this week on Capitol Hill, told "Face the Nation" on Sunday that he's not looking to "regulate them half to death, but we have a problem." Zuckerberg will appear at a rare joint hearing of the Senate Judiciary and Commerce Committees on April 10, the day before testifying at the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

"Our promised digital utopia has minefields in it," said Kennedy. "I have many, many questions, Mr. Zuckerberg. But my biggest worry with all this is that the privacy issue and what I call the propagandist issue are both too big for Facebook to fix, and that's the frightening part."

The Republican senator, referencing previous hearings from social media representatives on Capitol Hill last year after revelations that Russian troll farms used sites like Facebook and Twitter to sow discord during the 2016 election, said Facebook has been less than forthcoming with clear plans about how they aim to prevent user data from being used and harvested by third-party sources and advertisers. 

"Look, we've got to talk about the initial bargain. Is it fair for me to give up all of my personal data to Facebook and apparently everybody else in the Western Hemisphere in exchange for me being able to see what some of my high school buddies had for dinner Saturday night? Who owns my data? Do I own it or does Facebook own it?" Kennedy said.

"I do not want to hurt Facebook. It's done a lot of good, but how do we preserve the good things about Facebook while mitigating the obvious detrimental effects of it? It's a minefield in many respects," he added.

While Kennedy says he hopes Zuckerberg will be more frank with lawmakers at his Congressional appearances, he conceded, "We're not going to conclude this in one hearing."

"We can do it the easy way or the hard way," Kennedy said. "I do not want to regulate Facebook half to death but we do have two major problems we've discovered. One is the privacy issue and the other is the propagandist issue. Now, Facebook needs to talk with us frankly about how we can fix that and if it doesn't know how to fix it, which is my biggest worry, it needs to be be very frank in that regard too."

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