Damian Collins, the head of the committee that is also investigating the impact of social media on recent elections, had invited Zuckerberg to answer for a “catastrophic failure of process.”
"Mr Zuckerberg has personally asked one of his deputies to make themselves available to give evidence in person," Rebecca Stimson, Facebook’s head of U.K. public policy, said in a statement Tuesday. She said Chief Technology Officer Mike Schroepfer or Chief Product Officer Chris Cox would be "well placed" to answer questions.
Facebook has been under pressure since the revelations that vast swathes of data were held by British firm Cambridge Analytica, after it was obtained from a researcher who shared the data without the social network’s permission.
Stimson also said that about 1 percent of global downloads of the app created by the researcher came from users in the European Union, including the U.K.
Zuckerberg last week apologized for the company’s failure to protect its users and promised to investigate whether Cambridge still holds the information it obtained. The U.K.’s privacy watchdog searched the British firm’s offices over the weekend and said it needs to "assess and consider the evidence before deciding the next steps and coming to any conclusions.”
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