No facebook bug but site blamed
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FRENCH DATA WATCHDOG SAYS 'PRIVATE' MESSAGES WERE NEVER PRIVATE - AND SAYS COMPANY BOSSES AT FAULT FOR CONTINUAL CHANGES FRENCH data watchdog CNIL has told Facebook users there was
no "bug" that allowed private messages to be seen on their Timeline. But it has warned the social network that it its own failings and constant changes to privacy conditions were
to blame for the problem, the rumour and the way it spread as users did not trust the company. The Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés had examined claims that private
messages were suddenly on open view after Facebook launched its Timeline feature, which lists a history of a user's non-private content since joining the network. Last week users
flooded internet messageboards and Facebook itself with claims that a bug in its software had breached their privacy but CNIL said it had examined some of the messages involved and found
that, despite what users thought, they had never been private. But it attacked Facebook, saying: "The private character of the content of these messages seems indisputable. In other
words, users had the impression they were sending private messages when they were, in fact, using the wall-to-wall message system." And it said Facebook had "unilaterally and
continually" changed the privacy conditions of use between 2009 and 2010 and told the company it needed "greater transparency" on its use of users' personal information.
Facebook said that it "respects European legislation on data protection".