According to The Information, Facebook now plans to limit the processing and storing of video data to the device itself instead of on its servers. A source close to the company said that the move comes after months of discussions with privacy experts.

Facebook already has a massive trove of facial data on its many, many users and this latest scandal hasn't done much towards fostering trust in how the company manages that data. Some are expressing concern over the extra power Facebook might gain from having a video device in people's homes. "It would be concerning in my mind if Facebook is designing and releasing a hardware device that uses facial recognition, as they already have one of the largest facial recognition databases in the world," Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney Jennifer Lynch told The Information. "It would allow them to really take their algorithms to a whole new level because it would be scanning people inside the home from all different perspectives."

Facebook already faces a number of lawsuits over the Cambridge Analytica debacle as well as other issues with how it handles users' data. CEO Mark Zuckerberg is scheduled to testify before Congress next month.