• HOME
  • DIRECTORY
  • INTERVIEWS
  • Podcasts
  • MEDIA VIEWS
  • THE INDIE LIST
  • MEDIA JOBS
  • MEDIA STATS
    • TV
    • RADIO
  • GET LISTED
  • LOGIN
  • CONTACT
Mediastreet Mediastreet
News

Internal Facebook emails reveal execs discussed charging and cutting deals with companies for access to user data

By editor January 3, 2019
0
Share
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Pinterest Email
Share

By Jake Kanter

  • Facebook emails reviewed by The Wall Street Journal show executives discussing charging and cutting deals with companies to allow them access to Facebook user data.
  • The emails offer insight into Facebook’s efforts to monetize its vast trove of user data, highlighting how Facebook executives talked about pushing advertisers to spend more in return for access to user information.
  • Facebook, in response to the report, said it had “never sold anyone’s data.”
  • The emails are part of a cache of documents from an ongoing lawsuit against Facebook in California.

Facebook discussed charging and cutting deals with companies for access to the data of its 2 billion users, according to internal emails reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

The emails, secured from a cache of Facebook documents that form part of a lawsuit against the company in California, reveal Facebook executives talking about pushing advertisers to spend more in return for profile information on Facebook users.

One unnamed Facebook employee suggested shutting down data access “in one-go to all apps that don’t spend… at least $250k a year to maintain access to the data,” according to the report. The Journal did not review the full content of the email, however.

In another email exchange, Facebook insiders talked about settling a trademark issue with Match Group’s dating app Tinder in exchange for continued access to Facebook data. The matter was later resolved — but not through a data deal, the two firms told The Journal.

The emails, dated from 2012 to 2014, offer a window into Facebook’s activities after it went public in 2012, when it was grappling with ways of wringing value out of its treasure trove of personal data. Facebook has always insisted that it does not directly sell user information.

“To be clear, Facebook has never sold anyone’s data,” Konstantinos Papamiltiadis, Facebook’s director of developer platforms and programs, said in a statement.

The emails reviewed by The Journal are contained in documents seized by British Parliament last week. They form part of a lawsuit brought by Six4Three against Facebook for killing its app, Pikinis, when the social network restricted app developers’ access to user data in 2015.

The documents are under the seal of a California court order, but the UK’s Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee plans to publish a redacted version of the papers next week, believing them to be in the public interest.

Led by the lawmaker Damian Collins, the committee cast light on the documents’ contents during a hearing on Tuesday. This included accusations that Facebook had pushed advertisers to spend more in return for access to Facebook data.

MarkZuckerberg Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s empty chair. Gabriel Sainhas, House of Commons

During the hearing — which Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg declined to testify at despite repeated requests from government officials — British MP Clive Efford asked Facebook’s policy chief, Richard Allan, whether apps were given a favorable white-listing agreement in exchange for being able “to buy large quantities of mobile advertising through Facebook.” Allan denied this and discredited the court documents, saying they were obtained by a “hostile litigant.”

In a statement sent to Business Insider, Facebook’s Papamiltiadis said:

“As we’ve said many times, the documents Six4Three gathered for this baseless case are only part of the story and are presented in a way that is very misleading without additional context. Evidence has been sealed by a California court so we are not able to disprove every false accusation.

“That said, we stand by the platform changes we made in 2015 to stop a person from sharing their friends’ data with developers. Any short-term extensions granted during this platform transition were to prevent the changes from breaking user experience.

“To be clear, Facebook has never sold anyone’s data. Our APIs have always been free of charge and we have never required developers to pay for using them, either directly or by buying advertising.”

By Jake Kanter

Sourced from Business Insider UK

 

 

facebookFacebook user dataInternal Facebook emails
0
Author editor

  • Website
Prev Post

‘Advertisers think it’s just like buying digital’: Myths of connected TV advertising

January 3, 2019
Next Post

How to Use Social Media to Get Millennials to Buy From You

January 4, 2019

Related Posts

The Great Un-Pinning: Why Pinterest Abandoned Publishers and Flipboard Became Their Essential Alternative in 2025

October 24, 2025

News publishers take paywall-blocker 12ft.io offline

October 23, 2025

Write A Comment Cancel Reply

  • About
    About Me

    Mediastreet is your up to date Business Directory which also provides you with up to date Business News and Tips.

  • Mediastreet Directory
  • Connect & Follow
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Newsletter

    Subscribe to our newsletter for exclusive content and all of the behind the scenes details.

  • Latest Posts
    • 5X: The five seismic shifts that will reshape communications and marketing over the next five years

    • What You Need to Know About the TikTok Creator Rewards Program

    • Substack is the best place on the internet – let’s hope the brands don’t ruin it

    • How The Creator Economy Is Reshaping Modern Marketing – And Why Brands Are Paying Attention

  • Interviews
    • The Personality is Eoin Wrixon and his role is CEO of Packed.House and Wide Eye Media

      The Personality is Eoin Wrixon and his role is CEO of Packed.House and Wide Eye Media

    • Adrian Serle, Former CEO of Communicorp speaks to Mediastreet on his thoughts and experience in the Irish Radio market

      Adrian Serle, Former CEO of Communicorp speaks to Mediastreet on his thoughts and experience in the Irish Radio market

    • Grace Aungier – Queen of Magazines

      Grace Aungier – Queen of Magazines

  • Categories
    • Jobs (158)
    • News (5,523)
    • Sales (6)
    • Uncategorized (752)
  • Archives
  • About

    Mediastreet is your up to date Business Directory and also provides you with up to date Business News and Tips.

  • Recent Tweets
    Tweets by MediaStreetIrl
  • Popular Posts
    • More Time on Social Media is NOT Linked to Poor Mental Health
      November 3, 2017
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram

© 2020 Mediastreet. All Rights Reserved

Top
Mediastreet
  • HOME
  • DIRECTORY
  • INTERVIEWS
  • Podcasts
  • MEDIA VIEWS
  • THE INDIE LIST
  • MEDIA JOBS
  • MEDIA STATS
    • TV
    • RADIO
  • GET LISTED
  • LOGIN
  • CONTACT