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Chris Kelly Fought MoveOn to Defend Facebook's Infamous Beacon Program

by: Bob Brigham

Fri Jun 04, 2010 at 12:18:59 PM PDT


I believe I used a Prodigy email address to sign an online petition calling on congress to "censure President Clinton and move on" back in 1998. As I'm sure you know, out of those efforts rose the organization MoveOn, which sent emails to my Yahoo account for years and to my gmail for the last six years or so. It has been one of my favorite organizations, through their ups and downs, for a decade.

Which is why I simply can't fathom the blunder they made yesterday, thrusting themselves into the California Attorney General's race to fluff former Facebook Chief Privacy Officer (best oxymoron ever) Chris Kelly. In the final days of the campaign, no less.

MoveOn's fluffing of Kelly began yesterday morning when staffer Marika Shaub posted a link on MoveOn's FB Group, "Facebook, respect my privacy!" Shaub urged the 180,000 members to share a note from Chris Kelly with all of their Facebook friends and later MoveOn sent an email to an unknown number of members of MoveOn's giant list with Chris Kelly's message (I received it twice).

As I long-time Moveon member and devoted supporter, I was shocked that MoveOn's current leadership seems to have so little understanding of the dynamics and history of the battle for privacy. It was only back in 2007 that MoveOn went to war with Facebook, scoring a major victory for privacy by leading the organizing to shut down the infamous "Beacon" program. MoveOn was attacked repeatedly in the press by...Chris Kelly -- who was not defending privacy, but defending Beacon. In fact, Kelly made so much money eroding privacy at Facebook that he's dumped over $12,000,000 into his attempt to buy the California Democratic Party nomination for Attorney General.

If, like MoveOn apparently, you have forgotten how Chris Kelly fought MoveOn to defend Beacon, follow me after the jump. If you remember the history better than MoveOn, feel free to check out how Chris Kelly's campaign is already using MoveOn as a validator -- against attacks on Beacon, in the LA Times.

Bob Brigham :: Chris Kelly Fought MoveOn to Defend Facebook's Infamous Beacon Program
Here's a reminder from The New York Times Chris Kelly fighting MoveOn to defend Beacon:

MoveOn's demands could be satisfied by making the Beacon feature "opt in." Right now, users who don't want the information displayed need to opt out after purchases at each participating external site.

However, Chris Kelly, Facebook's chief privacy officer, said MoveOn is "misstating the way this process works."

He said the purchase appears only in the news feeds of confirmed friends and on the individual's profile (users have control over who can see their profiles), not to the "world." Mr. Kelly also pointed out that two ways to opt out, at the point of purchase on the external Web site, via a box that pops up, but fades away in under a minute and the next time they sign into their accounts. If users ignore the notification, the purchase information will be displayed, but nothing happens until the user signs in.

Chris Kelly was mocked for this over on ABC News' site:

The argument made by Facebook in support of this is disingenuous, and uses that old trick I learned in my PR days of isolating one error in the opponent's claim and using that to dismiss their entire argument. In this case, Chris Kelly, Facebook's "chief privacy officer" (one of those new corporate titles that's going to come back and bite companies) told the New York Times that MoveOn is "misstating the way this process works." In particular, he said, the purchase is only shared with confirmed friends and on the user's own profile, not to the "world." At the same time, he does confirm, that if the user ignores the notification and fails to opt out, the purchase information will be automatically displayed.

And this coming from the Chief Privacy Officer of Facebook.

Chris Kelly's attacks on MoveOn to defend Beacon made the hop across the pond, getting picked up by The Times:

A Facebook spokesperson said that MoveOn.org was "misrepresenting how Facebook Beacon works".

He said: "Information is shared with a small selection of a user's trusted network of friends, not publicly on the web or with all Facebook users. Users also are given multiple ways to choose not to share information from a participating site, both on that site and on Facebook."

Earlier this year, Facebook shrugged off privacy fears when Chris Kelly, the group's chief privacy officer, told The Times: "We have always said that information [submitted by users] may be used to target adverts."

"Shrugged off privacy fears"?

Of course, Chris Kelly was mocked, MoveOn was right:

So far, about 13,200 out of over 55 million members have joined MoveOn's protest group and Facebook is standing by the statements of chief privacy officer Chris Kelly, who told The Wall Street Journal that the company has been transparent with users and that it welcomes feedback from those who have concerns. According to the Journal, Kelly acknowledged that the company could change its policies based on customer reactions but that so far he says reaction has been "fairly muted."

While the Beacon scandal was the most extreme example, the fact of the matter is user privacy was continually eroded at Facebook during the time Chris Kelly was in charge of privacy. Play with this interactive chart, click on the different years to watch what happened to privacy at Facebook.

Chris Kelly got amazing rich eroding privacy at Facebook, which MoveOn honorably fought. Until yesterday, when out of incompetence over the history of their own campaign and cluelessness over progressive politics in the largest state, they came to the aid of Chris Kelly during the final days of his $12 million vanity campaign.

Californians don't want an Attorney General doing for Justice what Chris Kelly did for privacy. It would be nice if MoveOn were leading the charge against Chris Kelly, instead of giving him cover to defend himself against ads criticizing Chris Kelly for his role in the Beacon scandal...when he fought MoveOn.

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:::sigh:::: (2.00 / 1)
I honestly don't know how or if I'll vote in the AG primary. I'm not particularly wild about Harris or Kelly.  

I voted for: (3.00 / 1)
Janice Hahn.

[ Parent ]
I should have said (1.00 / 1)
Rocky Delgadillo

[ Parent ]
Rocky? Seriously? (3.00 / 1)
He would be the least desirable of them all.  

Not only does he have more baggage than all of the other candidates combined but he is, by far, the most conservative.  He's a total joke.  He was pillaried in the L.A. media for being in hoc to developers and the billboard companies, and was embarrassed by a scandal concerning his wife and the city-owned vehicles...

I'll take Harris--or even Kelly--over him any day.


[ Parent ]
Give Ted Lieu a look... (4.00 / 1)
http://www.tedlieu.com/

I have no ties to Lieu nor his campaign. Just pointing out there is another very qualified alternative to Harris or Kelly.


[ Parent ]
or Pedro Nava or Albert Torrico (3.00 / 1)
   That's term limits for you; always an oversupply of termed out Assemblymembers or Senators to run for the statewide offices. I liked Nava best based on his presentation at a forum, but he is least likely to win based on his financials. He might be a good AG but he isn't a good enough fundraiser...

[ Parent ]
I second a vote for Ted Lieu (3.00 / 1)
I saw him at a Judy Chu/Stonewall Democrats reception and he was very engaging.  

He has a progressive record and a good biography without any of the baggage of Kelly or Harris.  He seems to be running a serious campaign and he has shown that he has appeal to moderate and independent voters in his district.  His L.A. base should also be an advantage in the general and should (hopefully) help him in the tough primary.  I am also very happy with his efforts to take on the banks and address the foreclosure crisis.

I like Nava and Torricio.  Torricio seems to have quite a few endorsements and to be a decent candidate but I'm biased towards SoCal, I guess.  However, I am uninspired by Nava's focus on animal rights issues...it doesn't seem to be the most pressing issue in CA right now, imho.  

In any case, win-or-lose, I think Ted Lieu has a bright future, so it would be nice to see him put in a decent showing and hopefully my vote contributes to that, even if it is impossible to overtake the two lackluster frontrunners.


[ Parent ]
Why I'm voting for Kamala Harris. (3.00 / 2)
The polls indicate this race has boiled down to Kamala Harris and Chris Kelly, and the difference between them is stark.  One is a prosecutor with 20 years experience, twice elected as San Francisco DA.  The other is a corporate exec who has never held public office, and whose candidacy would be a joke except for his ability to contribute more than $12 million to his own campaign.

Although I like Lieu, Nava and Torrico, and think that on the merits they are reasonably competitive with Harris, the risk of Kelly buying the nomination is too great for me to vote for anyone but Harris.


[ Parent ]
Kelly is the only non-career politician in this race (0.00 / 0)
All the others are termed-out politicians who are merely reaching for the next rung on the political ladder.  They're part of the broken system.

The joke here, DavidT, is that you're voting for a candidate who failed at her current job and tried to sweep her incompetence under the rug.  The problems with the crime lab and with her repeated Brady violations continue to mount, and yet she's out campaigning.

At least Alberto Torrico, Pedro Nava, and Ted Lieu continue to do their jobs as assemblyman in Sacramento.

Vote anyone BUT Kamala.


[ Parent ]
Kelly lacks experience, so he pretends it doesn't matter. (3.00 / 2)
"Not a career politician" is political spin for "career businessman trying to buy his way into a high public office."  Yes, if you want someone who has no experience doing the actual work an attorney general does, Chris Kelly is your man.

Would corporate executive Kelly hire as his firm's top attorney someone who has never worked in the firm's line of business, spoke in vague generalities in the interview, spent most of his time viciously attacking another person being considered for the job, and dodged questions about his involvement in a privacy scandal at his current job?  I don't think so.

If Harris has "failed at her job," it is odd that she was easily reelected to it, that she now holds a strong lead for attorney general among those same voters, and that every major newspaper has endorsed her after examining the whole field of candidates.  

Kelly obviously thinks Harris is all that stands between him and the office he is trying to buy, so he's spending millions on Karl Rove-like falsehoods to try to push her out of the way.  It's important that he fail.  


[ Parent ]
I respect your opinions...BUT (0.00 / 0)
Labeling fact-based accusation "falsehoods" is just the kind of Karl Rove tactic of which you are accusing him.

Just because you say something isn't true doesn't make it so.  Deny her record all you like, it's still her record of failure.  Law enforcement doesn't trust her to do her job, why should we?

Every claim lowered agains Kamala Harris has been backed up with data and good journalistic research.  

If it's important that anyone in this race fail, it's her.


[ Parent ]
You make my point. (0.00 / 0)
San Francisco police chief George Gascon, San Diego chief William Lansdowne, and former LA chief William Bratton know a thing or two about law enforcement -- and they are supporting Kamala Harris.

Kelly's TV ad touts the endorsement of the Association of Deputy District Attorneys in LA.  One problem -- the same group endorsed two other AG candidates as well:  right-wing zealot John Eastman and right-wing state senator Tom Harman.  That's not in the TV ad.


[ Parent ]
Kelly (3.00 / 1)
I'm concerned about the lack of prosecutorial experience -- and since I live in San Mateo Country and was personally appalled by Wagstaffe's gestapo antics in the iPhone case, I wrote him in for San Mateo County Attorney General.  More of a protest, I guess, that Wagstaffe was running unopposed, but still, a good place for someone to get his feet wet with prosecution.

[ Parent ]
MoveOn showed astounding naivete (4.50 / 2)
They owe their members an apology.  And they really owe Kamala Harris an apology.  After all, while Chris Kelly was frittering away other people's privacy for fun and profit, Kamala was working to protect consumers and their privacy.  What thanks does MoveOn give Kamala for her dedication to this cause?  They give they guy who has uniformly been called "unqualified" by every major newspaper and who wants to buy the AG's office with his Facebook profits an opportunity to whitewash his sordid past.  Pathetic.

Frittering away... (0.00 / 0)
Be_Devine, you show considerable naivete... How exactly was Kamala working to protect consumers?  Just because you say so?  It sounds to me like she was too busy ignoring her job in informing Defendants that the witnesses against them might have a criminal record, so that, not only are hundreds of cases requiring review, she's now at risk of being disbarred.  Wouldn't it be great if the California State Bar DISBARRED the Attorney General?  Or she was ignoring problems at the crime lab so that now close to 1000 drug cases are either being dismissed or are requiring review.

Chris Kelly worked hard to protect the users of Facebook from scams and predators during his tenure there.  He worked with all the State's Attorneys General to promote and enact comprehensive protections for kids online.  If Facebook were unsafe, it wouldn't have grown from a community of 2.5 million to almost 500 million.  People vote with their feet (or their mouse-clicks).


[ Parent ]
Moveon send out an identical email with Kamala Harris late last night (2.00 / 1)
Looks like someone higher up the food chain at Moveon decided that they did a bad thing and was trying to give "equal time"

Kelly initiated the letter to MoveOn (0.00 / 0)
and the Harris Campaign tried to play it off in their letter that MoveOn "invited" his letter.

[ Parent ]
I guess Kelly didn't read the Platform (0.00 / 0)
Has anyone noticed that the latest Chris Kelly ads state that he favors the Death Penalty?  That's against the CDP Platform.

I guess nobody else except Kamala did... (0.00 / 0)
She's the only candidate who doesn't favor it.  Not really so Smart on Crime.

[ Parent ]
Chris Kelly is not a progressive (3.00 / 2)
He is an apostle of the failed, costly, wasteful "tough on crime" bullshit that we've suffered from in this state for 30 years. He is out of touch with the CDP and out of touch with California.

You can check out any time you like but you can never leave

[ Parent ]
Rehabilitation is now "not progressive?" (0.00 / 0)
If you commit a crime, you get punished.  That's pretty simple.  If you do it repeatedly, you get kept away from society for a long time.  I don't think there is any argument, including in the CDP line, about those simple facts.

Chris Kelly is tough on crime because you don't run for the state's top cop by being soft on crime.  However, in his plans are specific ideas about how to strengthen programs within the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation by connecting them with community-based Rehabilitation programs.  Education and training are key to reducing recidivism and preventing crime.

https://salsa.wiredforchange.c...


[ Parent ]
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