Home International Twitter employees concerned China could collect user data, says whistle-blower

Twitter employees concerned China could collect user data, says whistle-blower

321

Disclosures from a former Twitter Inc executive turned whistle-blower show that at least one Chinese agent is working at the company, Senator Chuck Grassley said in his opening remarks during a US Senate hearing on Tuesday featuring testimony from the whistle-blower.

Twitter Inc’s former security chief Peiter “Mudge” Zatko is seated to testify before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing to discuss allegations from his whistle-blower complaint that the social media company misled regulators, on Capitol Hill in Washington, US, September 13, 2022. Picture: Reuters/Evelyn Hockstein

By Sheila Dang and David Shepardson

WASHINGTON – Disclosures from a former Twitter Inc executive turned whistle-blower show that at least one Chinese agent is working at the company, Senator Chuck Grassley said in his opening remarks during a Senate hearing on Tuesday featuring testimony from the whistle-blower.

Peiter “Mudge” Zatko, a famed hacker who served as Twitter’s head of security until his firing last year, said during the hearing that some Twitter employees were concerned that the Chinese government would be able to collect data on the company’s users.

He referenced a Reuters story on Tuesday that detailed internal clashes between some teams that wanted to maximize the ad revenue opportunity from Chinese advertisers and others who were concerned about doing business inside China amid rising geopolitical tensions.

“In a nutshell, if we were already in bed, it would be problematic if we lost that revenue stream,” Zatko said.

“His disclosures also note that the FBI notified Twitter of at least one Chinese agent in the company,” Grassley said in his opening statement.

Grassley noted that Twitter Chief Executive Parag Agrawal refused to appear at the hearing for fear it could jeopardize the company’s litigation against Elon Musk, who is also the CEO of Tesla. Twitter and Musk head to trial next month over whether the $44 billion takeover deal should be completed.

Later on Tuesday, Twitter will also announce the results of a shareholder vote on Musk’s takeover of the company. A majority of shareholders have already approved the deal, sources told Reuters.

The San Francisco-based company sued Musk for terminating the agreement, while the Tesla chief executive counter-sued, accusing Twitter of misrepresenting the number of false and spam accounts on its service.

A Delaware judge ruled last week that Musk may include Zatko’s whistle-blower claims in his case against Twitter, but denied his request to delay the trial.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is questioning Zatko over his claims that Twitter misled regulators about its compliance with a 2011 settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over improper handling of user data.

Since then, Twitter has made “little meaningful progress on basic security, integrity and privacy systems,” Zatko’s complaint filed with regulators in July said.

The committee, chaired by US Senator Dick Durban, is also expected to press Zatko on his allegation that one or more of Twitter’s employees worked on behalf of foreign governments.

Durbin, speaking to reporters on Monday, said Zatko’s claims were “a matter of grave personal and privacy concern.”

Twitter has said Zatko was fired for “ineffective leadership and poor performance,” and that his allegations appeared designed to harm Twitter.

Zatko’s whistle-blower complaint appeared to contain over two pages of links to supporting documents, such as emails between Zatko and Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal and an assessment of misinformation and disinformation on Twitter. The number of documents was limited compared to Facebook whistle-blower Frances Haugen, who released thousands of pages of internal material.

– REUTERS

Previous articlePower cuts and rising costs threaten Christmas spending spree – Absa
Next articlePower failure disrupts issuing of IDs and passports at Home Affairs branches countrywide