Congressman Green asked Zuckerberg directly if he would commit to extending GDPR protections to Americans and the CEO replied, "Yes, Congressman. We believe that everyone around the world deserves good privacy controls. We have had a lot of these controls in place for years. The GDPR requires us to do a few more things and we are going to extend that to the world."

Green also asked specifically about GDPR requirements to make requests for user content clear, concise and understandable and how Facebook would implement that in the US. Zuckerberg said that every users' Facebook app will feature a tool at the top of the page that will walk them through settings and ask them to make decisions about what settings they want to implement. The Congressman then asked if Facebook would also be implementing GDPR rules that require it to allow all users to get a full copy of their information and share it with any company they would like. The Facebook CEO replied that while the company may be updating these tools a bit, it has allowed users to download their data, delete it and move it as they wish for years.

Lastly, Green referred to the GDPR feature that gives users the right to object to having their personal data used for marketing purposes. "Will the same right to object be available to Facebook users in the United States and how will that be implemented," he asked. Zuckerberg said that he wasn't sure how the company would be implementing that in the US and said he would follow up with the Congressman.

Zuckerberg's testimony is ongoing and you can follow along with us here.