The world’s biggest tech companies are failing to uphold users’ basic privacy rights, according to a comprehensive new analysis released Tuesday.
Top U.S. firms like Facebook, Google, and Microsoft all earned D or F grades in the first annual Corporate Accountability Index (pdf), released by the New America Foundation, a U.S.-based think tank. The index measured 16 global companies on their track records in privacy protections, upholding users’ freedom of expression, and their commitment to disclosing their practices which impact these concerns.
None of them were found to provide adequate information about the handling of user data, terms of service enforcement, and third-party requests to share or restrict content from either the government or private entities. Moreover, all the companies were impeded in privacy performance by surveillance and national security laws or other regulations.
“When we put the rankings into perspective, it’s clear there are no winners,” said Rebecca MacKinnon, director of Ranking Digital Rights, a project of New America Foundation which compiled the report. “Our hope is that the Index will lead to greater corporate transparency, which can empower users to make more informed decisions about how they use technology.”
Google was the top-rated internet company and earned the most points overall with a 65 percent score, while Europe’s Vodafone ranked highest among telecommunications firms with 54 percent. Yahoo scored 58 percent, Microsoft 56 percent, and Twitter and AT&T 50 percent each. It is worth noting that Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, is on the board of the New America Foundation.
Facebook scored 41 percent total. Its performance across all categories dropped due to its disclosure policies, which did not include subsidiaries such as Instagram and WhatsApp. On individual indicators, such as freedom of expression, the company scored 35 percent, largely due to its failure to provide comprehensive information about government requests to restrict content.
Ranking Digital Rights began compiling and analyzing its index in 2013. The 16 selected firms “collectively hold the power to shape the digital lives of billions of people across the globe,” the group stated in its summary.
Nearly half of the companies on the index—such as Bharti Airtel Limited in India, South Asia, and Africa, or Mail.ru in Russia—scored less than 25 percent, “showing a serious deficit of respect for users’ freedom of expression and privacy,” Ranking Digital Rights wrote in its executive summary.
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