I was thinking that every website I can find seems to have a log-in-through-facebook feature, and being that facebook never deletes any information on it's site and users, this could be a privacy concern.
I was thinking that every website I can find seems to have a log-in-through-facebook feature, and being that facebook never deletes any information on it's site and users, this could be a privacy concern.
You know when you get that feeling of being watched, but when you turn around, no-one's there? That's Facebook, that is.I was thinking that every website I can find seems to have a log-in-through-facebook feature, and being that facebook never deletes any information on it's site and users, this could be a privacy concern.
Yes. Not only is it everywhere, but it watches everything you do. Even when you turn your PC off.
Just don't tell Facebook anything you don't want people to know. I can't think of a simpler explanation.
The problem is that you unknowingly give Facebook much more information than you think you're giving them, and that's especially true if you happen to be a novice user who doesn't understand how the Internet works.
1. There is the information whose existence is not obvious. Simple things like “friend” relationships can tell a lot about you, especially if Facebook has all of them, and that's sometimes hard to miss especially when you forget how the whole is sometimes more than the sum of its parts. Facebook can also have the times of your visits, the profiles that you read, your approximate location (IP address), etc.
2. There is the information that you do not control. People can tag you in photos, they can request your friendship, they can like your posts, they can post comments, they can have some of your friends as their friends (without you having them).
3. There is the information they can collect outside of Facebook. It's not just Facebook logins, just the buttons that are hotlinked to Facebook servers can be used to gather more information about your browsing habits.
The worst part is that they have a significant portion of the Internet users and have a presence on a large portion of the web which allows them to have much more information that can be correlated and linked together to create even more information.
That's why I'm hoping for a decentralised social network to be developed. In it you'd choose which service you trust with your information, nobody has the entire information in one place, there's no central point for a government to block, mine or subpoena, there's no central authority to control the network, and you can run your own node in which your information as a whole is not shared with anybody (only the pieces of it are).
You opted in when you signed up.
You opted in when you signed up.
I didn't. Back in MY day facebook was nice, simple, and restricted to people with university emails.![]()
Those were the days.You opted in when you signed up.
I didn't. Back in MY day facebook was nice, simple, and restricted to people with university emails.![]()
Those were the days.You opted in when you signed up.
I didn't. Back in MY day facebook was nice, simple, and restricted to people with university emails.![]()
Just don't tell Facebook anything you don't want people to know. I can't think of a simpler explanation.
This is it, exactly.
Just don't tell Facebook anything you don't want people to know. I can't think of a simpler explanation.
This is it, exactly.
Not exactly, because others can tell Facebook details about you. email, phone number, your face, the last party you went to, etc, etc, etc... Facebook doesn't need you to sign up to get to know this.
That's what privacy settings are for.
Is there an app for that?This is it, exactly.
Not exactly, because others can tell Facebook details about you. email, phone number, your face, the last party you went to, etc, etc, etc... Facebook doesn't need you to sign up to get to know this.
So don't have stupid friends?
That's what privacy settings are for.
I for example didn't want my email in the FB database (long before I joined, and then I joined using a different address). But some of my friends searched for me by entering my private email address. Didn't find me. Entering my business email. Didn't find me. Entering my name. Didn't find me. Entering my name, my email address an my region. Didn't find me. But Facebook already had a nice dataset about my person. There's no privacy setting against this.
Is there an app for that?Not exactly, because others can tell Facebook details about you. email, phone number, your face, the last party you went to, etc, etc, etc... Facebook doesn't need you to sign up to get to know this.
So don't have stupid friends?
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