Facebook

Someone posted an article about some of the terms that Facebook has people submit to. I'll post a summary of it here - in case anyone cares:

Here is the article - it is long.

The last time you accepted the Facebook Terms of Service you agreed to a clause that essentially says from here on out, by continuing the use of Facebook on the web or the Facebook App you agree to any new ToS and any changes to the ToS. Basically from here onward, you will not ever have to accept any new ToS/Privacy changes and Facebook can essentially change whatever they want and not inform you because you will never need to directly accept any change/new policy.

On January 30th, Facebook changed a few things.

They now track your location via your phone and track when/where/who you hang out with based on other people having the app on their phone as well. The latest update to the Facebook App has asked for permissions to use your microphone can enable it and record you/others without you knowing and without any indication.

This cannot be turned off or disabled in any way. (Google tracks you too but have been transparent in my opinion and allow you to turn off every aspect and even delete things they've cataloged in the past about you).

Furthermore, they have disabled some privacy settings you could have disabled/tweaked in the past. Other settings you can disable now but there have been loopholes established. For example, you can choose to not share certain data publicly or with anyone for that matter but if any of your friend(s) have chosen to share everything (most people do because they are unaware) then they implicitly share your data too and your data will be publicly shared even if you have it turned off yourself. The same applies to other Apps that have Facebook permissions/ask for any Facebook related connections.

Most concerning:

If you are unaware, in the past if you log into Facebook on your browser and check your stuff then close the tab and don't log out, Facebook actually tracks what you do next. They track what sites you visit and things you look at in order to give you better ads. That I knew of and was kind of OKAY with because it seemed fine to me. Now with the latest update to the ToS, even if you log out of Facebook and close the tab, they continue to track what you are doing. Furthermore, and this is insane , now they have your permission to track what you search for, what you enter into fields INCLUDING banking information, credit card information, stuff you type but then delete and don't even submit. This is absolutely ludicrous in my opinion and I cannot imagine how this could be used without malicious intent. What is utmost disappointing is, through my trial and experimentation and from what the author of the article has stated there is nothing we can do to undo what has already been collected on us in the past.

Looking ahead, you can do several things if you are not okay with getting rid of Facebook entirely. First and foremost, I'd suggest uninstalling the app immediately. Then there are several settings you can and should change to minimize what is collected on you. I can detail this if anyone wants me to. Second, if you'd like to continue to use Facebook, log out of it in your normal browser that you use and restart your current browser or even computer if you can. Then I'd suggest only access Facebook in an incognito mode (hold Ctrl+Shift+N in Chrome) and log out every time.

Hopefully a lawsuit or some big news break could put a damper on this but only time will tell.
 
I suppose they also keep information after an account is "deleted"?
 
I suppose they also keep information after an account is "deleted"?

As far as I know you can't even delete your account. They only let you "de-activate" it… But the way I'm reading this, it looks like anything you've done is forever stored. It's not clear if they continue to track after you've de-activated your account.
 
People who don't want companies tracking every move you make on the internet and not allowing you to stop them. If you don't, then good for you

As long as they don't exploit the information they get on people. Then I don't see what the big deal is.
 
The ones who make it so clear they are doing it are the least of your worries.

Good point. Facebook does seem to be basically concerned with transparency, if only because they know that a legitimate public outcry could seriously damage their business model.

I deactivated my Facebook account several years ago, and try to stay off of all social media (with the exception of Twitter, which is a superb aggregate source for news) although I do still have a 'burner' account for research (read: stalking) purposes. My friends recently coerced me into getting on Snapchat -- which I kind of despise.
 
The ones who make it so clear they are doing it are the least of your worries.

Fair point. But I don't think they're being transparent. Google is transparent - and they have actually resisting giving customer data to the government - which I can appreicate. Facebook gives or sells it to whoever asks.

Additionally, I'm a little uneasy on accepting terms and conditions forever - no matter what they are changed to.
 
Good point. Facebook does seem to be basically concerned with transparency, if only because they know that a legitimate public outcry could seriously damage their business model.

I deactivated my Facebook account several years ago, and try to stay off of all social media (with the exception of Twitter, which is a superb aggregate source for news) although I do still have a 'burner' account for research (read: stalking) purposes. My friends recently coerced me into getting on Snapchat -- which I kind of despise.

I'm a big fan of twitter and hate snapchat
 
Additionally, I'm a little uneasy on accepting terms and conditions forever - no matter what they are changed to.

If it makes you feel any better, it would be incredibly hard to make that stick legally (if they do something outside the norm for the product you are using). It's the same with any contract.
 
Good point. Facebook does seem to be basically concerned with transparency, if only because they know that a legitimate public outcry could seriously damage their business model.

I deactivated my Facebook account several years ago, and try to stay off of all social media (with the exception of Twitter, which is a superb aggregate source for news) although I do still have a 'burner' account for research (read: stalking) purposes. My friends recently coerced me into getting on Snapchat -- which I kind of despise.

I use Facebook a lot. It's useful for my career.
 
Back
Top