FB is indeed probably upset because employers were stupid and started asking applicants for their info directly instead of going behind their backs and asking FB for it instead (which FB would have happily given them ... for a fee, of course).
It's pretty likely FB will quietly roll out a paid background check service (which will be hyper-secretive and kept whisper-quiet) at the same time they are publicly grandstanding about this issue. In the linked article, there is a link to a second article about a US Senator who is currently crusading on this issue. He comes right out and says there will be exceptions for law enforcement, government contractors, and jobs with security clearances. Look for them to extend those exceptions until social media spying is back to being a de-facto part of applying for a job, any job. They're going to legitimize this while pretending to be fighting it.
It's pretty likely FB will quietly roll out a paid background check service (which will be hyper-secretive and kept whisper-quiet) at the same time they are publicly grandstanding about this issue. In the linked article, there is a link to a second article about a US Senator who is currently crusading on this issue. He comes right out and says there will be exceptions for law enforcement, government contractors, and jobs with security clearances. Look for them to extend those exceptions until social media spying is back to being a de-facto part of applying for a job, any job. They're going to legitimize this while pretending to be fighting it.
(sounds paranoid, yes ... until it happens)