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Facebook isn’t planning to tell you if you’re one of the 533 million people whose data leaked

Facebook isn’t planning to tell you if you’re one of the 533 million people whose data leaked

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The company's response has been lackluster

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Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Facebook is responding to the recent news that data from 533 million accounts leaked online for free, but perhaps not in the way users might have hoped: the company doesn’t plan to notify the users whose data was exposed online, a Facebook spokesperson told Reuters.

In the dataset, there’s apparently a lot of information that you might not want floating around the internet — including birthdays, locations, full names, and phone numbers — so it’s disappointing to hear that Facebook doesn’t plan to notify users that might be affected. The company cited two reasons to Reuters as to why it’s not telling users proactively: it says it’s not confident it would know which users would need to be notified, and that users wouldn’t be able to do anything about the data being online.

On Tuesday Facebook wrote on its blog that it “believes” the data was scraped via its contact importer sometime before September 2019, a method that’s in violation of the company’s policies. But as BuzzFeed News reporter Ryan Mac points out, this doesn’t quite mesh with the fact that the company hasn't spoken out or filed lawsuits against controversial surveillance company Clearview AI for scraping photos from Instagram and Facebook.

Facebook says it has “made changes to the contact importer” to stop the scraping.

If you’re concerned about whether or not your data was included in the data dump, and don't want to wait to see if Facebook will change its mind about notifying users, you can take a look at our guide on how to see if you were affected. And for more about the data set and Facebook‘s lack of transparency around it, you should read Wired’s piece about the company’s inconsistent messaging.

Facebook has not responded to a request for comment.