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Facebook Inc. is moving forward with plans to let outside websites and applications request addresses and mobile-phone numbers from users, a feature that had prompted privacy questions from U.S. lawmakers.
The social-networking site has not determined when it will reintroduce the feature but is evaluating ways to enhance user control, including potential additions to the permissions screen, Marne Levine, Facebook vice president of global public policy, wrote in a Feb. 23 letter to U.S. representatives Edward Markey and Joe Barton.
Facebook also is actively considering whether to allow applications to request contact information from minors, Levine said in the letter.
Introduced on Jan. 14, the feature allowed application developers to request contact information from Facebook users who gave their consent. The company disabled it a few days later, saying in a Jan. 17 blog post that it had received feedback from users who wanted to be more clearly aware of when they are granting access to their data.
Markey, a Democrat from Massachusetts, and Barton, a Republican from Texas, sent a letter Feb. 2 to Facebook Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg asking about the companys plans for the feature.
Mobile phone numbers and personal addresses, particularly those that can identify teenagers using Facebook, require special protection, Markey said in a statement today.
Im pleased that Facebooks response indicated that its looking to enhance its process for highlighting for users when they are being asked for permission to share their contact information, he said.
Andrew Noyes, a Washington-based spokesman for Facebook, said the companys letter speaks for itself and had no additional comment.
Facebook said in a letter (
PDF) released today that it is evaluating different ways to "enhance user control" over information sharing that would go into effect "once the feature is re-enabled."