The Ranking Digital Rights 2018 Corporate Accountability Index is now online!

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Top internet, mobile, and telecommunications companies failed to disclose key policies and practices affecting users’ freedom of expression and privacy, according to results of the 2018 Corporate Accountability Index, which Ranking Digital Rights released today.

Tune in here at 9:30am ET (13:30 UTC) to watch the 2018 Index global launch event at Columbia University in New York City. You can also join the conversation on Twitter by following @rankingrights and by using the hashtag #rankingrights.

The 2018 Index evaluated 22 companies whose products and services are collectively used by over half of the world’s 4.2 billion internet users. Results showed that while some companies have improved disclosures in the past year, most internet users are still being left in the dark about how their personal information is accessed and used, and how online speech is managed and policed.

“Companies have not been clear enough about how their products, services, business operations and business models might either cause harm, or be used to violate internet users’ rights,” said Rebecca MacKinnon, director of Ranking Digital Rights. “People do not have enough information to make informed choices as consumers or as citizens, exposing them to undisclosed risks.”

Findings from the 2018 Index include:

  • Facebook disclosed less about how it handles user data than most of its U.S. peers. It also disclosed less information about options for users to control what is collected about them, and how it is used, than any other company in the Index, including two Chinese companies and two Russian companies.
     
  • Most companies withhold basic information about measures they take to safeguard users’ data from breach or theft, preventing users from knowing the risks they may face when using a particular platform or service.
     
  • All of the companies evaluated disclosed too little about how they handle users’ information. In addition to Facebook, companies including Google, Twitter, Apple, Samsung, AT&T, Vodafone, Telefónica, and Orange disclosed too little about how user information is shared for targeted advertising. This opacity makes it easier for digital platforms and services to be abused and manipulated by a range of state and non-state actors who seek to attack individuals as well as institutions and communities.
     
  • Companies do not adequately inform the public about how they police content on their platforms and services. In light of revelations that the world’s most powerful social media platforms have been used to spread disinformation and manipulate political outcomes in a range of countries, companies’ efforts to police and manage content lack accountability without greater transparency.
     
  • Too few companies make users’ rights a central priority for corporate oversight and risk assessment. Companies do not have adequate processes to identify and mitigate the full range of potential harms to users that may be caused not only by government censorship or surveillance, and by malicious non-state actors, but also by practices related to their own business models.

Companies were assessed on 35 indicators in three categories: Governance, Freedom of Expression, and Privacy. The 2018 Index applied the same methodology as the 2017 Index, which enabled us to produce comparative analyses of each company’s performance and to track overall trends.

The 2018 Index also includes recommendations for governments, questions for investors, and recommendations for companies.

To view and download the complete report, including interactive data and analysis, company report cards, methodology, raw data files, and other resources for download, visit rankingdigitalrights.org/index2018. The 2018 Index website and data visualization were developed in partnership with the SHARE Foundation, a digital rights NGO.

For those who want to help promote the Index and our findings, please see our social media toolkit, which contains downloadable report graphics and sample social media posts.

Highlights

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