You can be on Entrepreneur’s cover!

'Mark and I Strongly Disagree With Their Characterization': Facebook's Sheryl Sandberg Hits Back at Apple CEO Tim Cook in Simmering Data Row Cook has made much of Apple's 'respectful' approach to personal information since the Cambridge Analytica scandal and has said Facebook is 'beyond' regulation.

By Jake Kanter

entrepreneur daily

This story originally appeared on Business Insider

Allison Shelley | Stringer | Getty Images
Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg.

The simmering privacy row between Apple and Facebook spilled over again Tuesday, as Sheryl Sandberg defended the social network after repeated attacks from Tim Cook.

The Apple CEO has twice needled Facebook over the Cambridge Analytica data fiasco: He played up what he described as Apple's "respectful" approach to personal information earlier this month and in March said Facebook was "beyond" regulation.

Sandberg, who is Facebook's chief operating officer, was asked about Cook's comments at the Code Conference in California. CEO Mark Zuckerberg previously described the comments as "extremely glib."

"Mark and I strongly disagree with their characterization of our product," Sandberg said. "We're proud of the business model we've built. We have an ad-supported business that allows people all around the world to use a product for free."

Sandberg appeared onstage alongside Facebook's chief technology officer, Mike Schroepfer, who doubled down on her remarks. He said that it was popular to give Facebook a kicking but that he wanted a more sophisticated debate about privacy.

"The thing that I wish we could spend more time on is the substance of these issues," he said. "Times when you can get nice quippy sound bites and kick someone when it's popular and they're down -- that's us right now. I get it. We in many ways deserve it.

"There's lots of questions on trade-offs. How do you build a product that the whole world can use? Can every consumer afford a $10 subscription or a $700 device? For billions of people around the world, no, not yet. So I think there are trade-offs."

Schroepfer was referring here to the merits of different business models, with companies like Netflix charging a monthly fee in exchange for shows without ads and Apple charging hundreds of dollars for its hardware.

Sandberg with Facebook's chief technology officer, Mike Schroepfer.
Image credit: Recode/YouTube


Schroepfer said the Cambridge Analytica scandal had brought about the biggest cultural shift at Facebook in a decade. "We're learning from our mistakes and we're taking action," Sandberg added. "We're also humble. We have a different mindset -- we have to look around the corner to see the next threat."

Cook hasn't been the only tech CEO to lob insults at Facebook. Just minutes before Sandberg took the stage on Tuesday, Snap CEO Evan Spiegel said "we would really appreciate it if they copied our data-protection practices," a reference to Facebook persistently adopting Snapchat features.

You can watch the full Sheryl Sandberg and Mike Schroepfer interview here:

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Leadership

You Won't Have a Strong Leadership Presence Until You Master These 5 Attributes

If you are a poor leader internally, you will be a poor leader externally.

Business News

Samsung Makes 6 Day Workweeks Mandatory for Executives as the Company Enters 'Emergency Mode'

Samsung said its performance "fell short of expectations" last year. Now executives are required to work weekends.

Business Ideas

63 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2024

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2024.

Business News

I Tried Airchat, the Hottest New Social Media App in Silicon Valley — Here's How It Works

Airchat is still invite-only and prioritizes voices with no option to upload photos or write text, making it feel more human than Facebook or Reddit.

Growing a Business

They Designed One Simple Product With a 'Focus on Human Health' — and Made $40 Million Last Year

Marilee Nelson, Allison Evans and Kelly Love founded cult-favorite cleaning brand Branch Basics in 2012.