At least one member of Congress regarded new information about Facebook’s data-sharing partnerships with tech companies as evidence that the company’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, lied to lawmakers in April about the control users have over their information on the social media platform.

The New York Times reported Sunday that Facebook formed deals with at least 60 makers of cell phones and other devices allowing them access to users’ personal information and that of their Facebook friends, without explicit consent.

Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Samsung were among the companies Facebook reached agreements with, allowing the companies to access users’ relationship status, religion, political views, and upcoming events they attend.

The deals may have breached Facebook’s compliance with a 2011 agreement with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) ordering the company to keep users’ information private.

The companies’ access remained in tact even after Facebook realized in 2015 that the political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica had exploited its access to tens of millions of users’ personal information.

Facebook has faced intense scrutiny in recent months over the Trump-linked firm’s profiling of U.S. voters in order to target them with personalized political ads, using personal information it obtained from Facebook.

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