INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
questions thrown at Mark Zuckerberg by US lawmakers Tuesday, none appeared to flummox the Facebook founder more than Senator Dick Durbin's
pointed query about where he slept the previous evening."Would you be comfortable sharing with us the name of the hotel you stayed in last
night" Durbin asked during an intense and closely-watched hearing about online digital privacy, and Facebook's role in what happens to
personal information once users join the platform.Zuckerberg paused for a full eight seconds, chuckled, grimaced, and ultimately
demurred."Um, uh, no," he said.And "if you've messaged anybody this week would you share with us the names of the people you've messaged"
the Illinois Democrat persisted.Again, a similar unwillingness to answer.Perhaps more than any other senator during five hours of
questioning, Durbin's everyman tactic put a finger on the crux of the issue surrounding Facebook's failure to maintain control of the
private information of tens of millions of users, amid a scandal over the gathering of personal data used to target political advertising
and messaging during the 2016 presidential race."I think that might be what this is all about," said Durbin, 40 years Zuckerberg's
senior."Your right to privacy, the limits of your right to privacy, and how much you give away in modern America in the name of connecting
people around the world.Zuckerberg, who at 33 runs a multi-billion-dollar company with some two billion users, accepted personal
responsibility for the leak of users' data and vowed that the company will do better in guarding such information.He also conceded Durbin's
"I think everyone should have control over how their information is used," Zuckerberg said.(Except for the headline, this story has not been
edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)