There is simply no comparison in the manner Google treats your personal data with Facebook's attitude toward it.
At Google, as a dev, gaining access to personally identifiable information (that was hashed, anonymized like crazy, and scrubbed in every possible way to make damn sure there's no way the dev using the data could possibly track down any of the users) required jumping through so many hoops and getting so many different approvals and reviews it felt almost paranoid.
At Facebook, for years, they had a master password that could access all information on anyone's profile. They would just flat-out give this password to every single new hire, even people who weren't working with the data directly.
At Google, as a dev, gaining access to personally identifiable information (that was hashed, anonymized like crazy, and scrubbed in every possible way to make damn sure there's no way the dev using the data could possibly track down any of the users) required jumping through so many hoops and getting so many different approvals and reviews it felt almost paranoid.
At Facebook, for years, they had a master password that could access all information on anyone's profile. They would just flat-out give this password to every single new hire, even people who weren't working with the data directly.