Facebook's founder, Mark Zuckerberg, has defended its privacy policies
Privacy campaigners have
welcomed a report that Facebook is to ask users to opt into any changes
in the way it uses their personal information.
The social network previously announced alterations to its members' settings without asking for fresh consent.
The website is changing its policy after an investigation by the US Federal Trade Commission, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal.
Facebook is not commenting on the story at this time.
The report suggests the site has also agreed to privacy audits by an independent organisation over the next 20 years.
However, it says the FTC does not prescribe how consent should be obtained.
Suspicion
"Facebook has historically been extremely resistant to
transparency in its own operations, so we welcome measures that would
force the company to obtain express consent of its users," said the
London based advocacy group Privacy International.
"However, it seems likely that the FTC's demands will only
present a temporary obstacle in the path of Facebook's ambitions to
collect its users' information.
"Faced with reams of small print, most users are likely to
automatically agree to policy changes, with each change bringing us one
step closer to Zuckerberg's vision of a privacy-free future."
The website's founder, Mark Zuckerberg, was questioned about
the firm's privacy policies on the US television network PBS' Charlie
Rose show earlier this week.
"You have control over every single thing you've shared on Facebook," he said, "You can take it down."
He also said other search engines and advertising networks
gather "huge amount of information" about internet users through
cookies, which he claimed was "less transparent than what is happening
at Facebook".
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