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In response to Cardozo's recent op-ed, Facebook's CEO, Mark Zuckerberg,
In response to Cardozo's recent op-ed, Facebook's CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, has been in on the action with his company's own privacy policy.
"On behalf of all Facebook users, we are pleased to share a statement from Mark at the beginning of 2015 detailing some of the major changes that have been made to our policy regarding the privacy policies of Facebook and other social networks for the past two years," he wrote.
For instance, Facebook says that it has updated its privacy policy with a new definition of "personal privacy," which has been "expanded in recent years to include the following: personal privacy, such as the ability to share or sell private information about you, such as your address, social media profiles, links to sites and services, and the way you use your personal information."
But that's just a few of Facebook's changes.
As a result, privacy advocates and other privacy advocates are concerned that the company is not just about its data, but about its users' right to privacy.
On one hand, the company's new privacy policy can make that clear. It can make it clear that the company is taking action on every individual's behalf, not just about the people who use it.
That's particularly true if you're Facebook's data-driven business.
"We're not going to take anything away from a company like Facebook to try to make them better," says John Rauch, a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who has studied Facebook for more than 30 years.
Rauch says he's not sure that the new privacy policy is a good thing.
"It's not an expansion of the legal protections that Facebook has offered for people," he says. "It's a new one."
But Rauch is skeptical that the privacy policy will change Facebook's policies and has said that it's "still not the right thing for Facebook to do."
But he has also argued that what's important to Facebook is its business model.
"We don't want to change anything about the business model. If you can change the rules, it's your business model," he says. "It's about the people who use it."
But Facebook's privacy policy is also an attack on the privacy rights of its users.
"The company is going to be using a very bad argument to convince people to use more effective privacy protections in order to stay in business," says Robert K. Fiske, a professor of legal policy at the
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