Five things we learned from Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook hearing The CEO’s privacy is as vulnerable as ours, and the social network faces a regulation battle
Hugs all round, the Zuck finds Congress a bit of a breeze Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg needn’t have worried as grilling on data misuse turns into a kid-glove stroking
Australian victims speak out about Cambridge Analytica Facebook scandal Brisbane woman ‘never agreed’ to personal information being shared with Cambridge Analytica
Act on data privacy or we’ll regulate, UK minister tells Facebook Digital secretary Matt Hancock says social media firm not above the law and must do more
Shhh … Alexa might be listening Amazon has filed a patent that could allow its Echo devices to one day listen in on conversations to help with user recommendations. A handy feature or more fodder for conspiracy theories?
Five questions Mark Zuckerberg should be asked by Congress As embattled Facebook founder appears before Congress again, here is what should be put to him
Zuckerberg got off lightly. Why are politicians so bad at asking questions? Senators let Facebook’s founder off the hook – but that’s got nothing to do with them being tech dinosaurs, says Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland
EU threatens to crack down on Facebook over hate speech Commissioner says voluntary code could be scrapped in favour of legislation and sanctions
The key moments from Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony to Congress Facebook’s chief executive on the right to privacy, banning Cambridge Analytica and the things he is taking responsibility for
Congress tried to crack Zuckerberg – but Facebook still has all the power Analysis: even as senators challenged the social media CEO, they were directing listeners to the social network he created
Mark Zuckerberg vows to fight election meddling in marathon Senate grilling Facebook’s CEO appeared before Congress in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal to address concerns over users’ data
Congress grills Facebook CEO over data misuse – as it happened Mark Zuckerberg gave testimony to Senate committees in light of revelations that Cambridge Analytica used Facebook data to influence US voters
Facebook and Cambridge Analytica face class action lawsuit Lawyers in UK and US allege four firms misused personal data of more than 71m people
Nothing brings out tiny violins like pretty people moaning. But might they have a point? Being beautiful mainly seems a blessing. But it can be a curse – and the main problem is that you are just not allowed to complain about it