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Facebook Ties Become Political Baggage in California Campaign

BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, May 25 2010

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg might be starting to walk back some of the company's more offensive privacy moves, but the company's stumbles are, reports the Wall Street Journal's John Letzin, causing former Facebook privacy official and current candidate California Attorney General Chris Kelly some grief. Kelly's main opponent in the hotly-contested Democratic primary, San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris, put out a statement chiding Kelly for Facebook's controversial approach to privacy -- and used Zuckerberg himself as a cudgel while doing it:

"Was Kelly simply a fox guarding the hen house at Facebook?" the campaign asked. "If Kelly couldn't stand up to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg on behalf of Facebook users, how on earth can Californians trust Kelly to go to bat on their behalf as attorney general?"

Robin Swanson, a spokeswoman for Mr. Kelly, said the privacy storm surrounding Facebook only began in earnest after he left the company. Though he resigned in March, he effectively left last August, when he began a leave of absence, she said.

It's a little remarkable how quickly the battle between the Facebook's base of 300 million users and the company itself has become shorthand for the battle between good and evil, stark enough for use in a political campaign. Last time California elected an attorney general, in 2006, Facebook was still a niche platform closed to most people. The California primary is June 8th.

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