 Facebook's mishandling your data is growing the company now says the personal information of up to 87 million people may have been shared with Cambridge Analytica this latest development coming as Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg set to testify next week on Capitol Hill Melissa Armo of stock swoosh.com joins us now. Hey Melissa. Hi good morning. Good morning. What do you think Zuckerberg is gonna say to lawmakers that can make this any better? Well I think he's probably gonna say the same thing pretty much that he said last night he gave an hour long lecture last night a question and answer to reporters and he pretty much said that they didn't do a good enough job protecting people's information and he didn't take it seriously enough back in 2016. He was very he was very apologetic and I think that he's going to be very similar to like that next week when he testified. Yeah but he seems to continue to dig himself into a ditch. He also said this let's roll the sound mic. Everyone has a setting on Facebook that controls it's right in your privacy settings that controls whether people can look you up by your contact information. Most people have that turned on and that's the default. It is reasonable to expect that if you have that setting turned on that at some point in the last several years someone has probably accessed your public information in this way. Melissa because Facebook is free we need to assume that our data is being shared pretty much. And again if you go on there and you've subscribed to any apps or ever downloaded any apps and they've had access to your information and you've allowed them access to your information according to their privacy policies and I think that's the big thing that's going to that's the bugaboo with Congress because Facebook has to have a way of finding out that these companies these apps are actually implementing their own privacy standards which it seems in this case they didn't with the other company that had the leak of all the information. Are you buying anything in tech right now. I actually don't think anything is a buying the market right now. And I that's the first time I've ever said that and the reason is because the market has had a lot of selling in February a lot of selling in March and it's it's institutional selling and because it's institutional selling I don't see a reason institutions are going to go back in and buy right of ways and even Amazon looks lower to me. That's what I had to ask you. There's a lot of people are saying you know what President Trump keep tweeting attacking Amazon and Bezos and the Washington Post because you just made a very healthy company a lot cheaper. You don't agree with that perspective. I think Amazon is lower. I think Amazon is in an uptrend. I think Amazon could drop 300 points and still being an uptrend. Of course it would be a great buy at 1000. Is it a great buy at 1300 1400 where it closed around yesterday. No not necessarily the stock gap down last week and when you have a gap down like that a big gap down whatever the reason is tweeting earnings whatever I don't think it's a time to go back in and buy. Yeah and we have Facebook and Amazon earnings April 25th and 26th so they're coming up. Melissa thank you so good to see you. Thanks. All right we have a little sports coming up for you.