Facebook Beacon Privacy Issues Worse Than Previously Thought?
An anonymous reader writes "Further developments in the Facebook Beacon affair ... According to PC World, a Computer Associates researcher claims that Beacon, when installed on participating sites, is sending data about users' activity back to Facebook, even when a user is logged out of Facebook - despite Facebook's claims to the contrary."
No privacy on a social networking website? I am shocked!
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What were we to expect with money to be had? They need something to justify that ridiculous price tag they've given themselves. Users = dollar signs to them. It's funny how every time they add a feature that invades the users' privacy to make money, they release some statement like "Oh, once users calm down, they'll find these services to be useful." Putting in privacy controls and restrictions later means they get away with more and only have to patch what users find out and complain about. That being said, don't claim malicious intent where ignorance is just as likely the cause. (Full Disclosure: I was one of the users who has been banned from Facebook for posting negative comments ("spam") during the mini-feeds debacle. So I have some negative bias.)
I was playing some rinky-dink flash game on kongregate.com and all of the sudden a little DHTML window panned up from the bottom of the browser and said "Tower Defense has added a story to your Facebook profile."
At that point I had three questions:
1) What is a flash game site doing talking to Facebook?
2) How do you know what my Facebook ID is?
3) Where the fuck do you get off?
I had to go several menus deep in Facebook to figure out how to opt-out of this crap. I haven't been back to kongregate since. Absolute crap.
This tagline is umop apisdn.
I'm sure Facebook would never monitor my activity on other si
It looks like you're writing a comment criticising Facebook! Would you like to:
- Delete the comment
- Tell everyone how great Facebook is?
- Add some more useless junk to your Facebook profile?
- Spam all your friends with a picture of a 'cute' travelling bear?
I would presume that rather than removing cookies upon 'logout', they keep a note of the fact you're logged out, and continue to track that cookie, knowing that the last logged in user was you.
Um, why bitch at kongregate.com or other sites for using Beacon, instead of just ditching Facebook? Without a Facebook account, this won't a problem on any site.
"Slashdot has added a story to your Facebook profile."
Ut Tensio, Sic Vis
Actually, you can't delete a Facebook account, only deactivate it. After reading the PC World article a couple days ago, I tried to delete mine, and was told that I could log back in any time and it would be ready and waiting for me. Something tells me they don't stop mining data from other sites just because you've deactivated the account, when they're not even willing to delete your favorite brand of toilet paper from your profile. I wiped every bit of information about me by hand, aside from my wall posts, which were simply too numerous.
This is just the next in a long line of privacy violations by social networking sites such as Facebook. They target a primarily young and non tech-savvy audience so they can get away with the most atrocious breaches in privacy until they overstep the boundary and do something that's blatantly egregious, even to the most innocent Internet users. With Beacon, Facebook allowed other users to see our online shopping habits. I feel that the latest revelation about Beacon "calling home" won't be as resonant with the general public. We've gotten used to a data-mining culture and don't worry about some faceless "they" having access to all this information. Perhaps if we imagined these personal details being broadcast on national TV, it would be a different story.
Phoenix, Boston, Little Rock, see a pattern?
This might be useful for some people. It shows you how to block Facebook's Beacon.
Probably 'web bugs'. These are usually 1x1 pixel images, placed on the 3rd party page but served from Facebook's domain. The web bug can then access all your Facebook cookies and pass details onto the 3rd party site.
A trick borrowed from spammongers, who embed these things in emails to vaildate email addresses.
Google stopped becoming a search engine and is now an advertising company that does a bit of searching on the side. Same will happen to Facebook. You might use it as a social networking site but it WILL become more concerned with getting ads on screen.
I have excellent Karma and I am not afraid to Troll it.
The problem is that Facebook is lying about it, and doing so repeatedly.
CA received a statement from Facebook following their blog entries, which speaks to the use of this data.
Advertisements that appear on Facebook are sometimes delivered (or "served") directly to users by third party advertisers. They automatically receive your IP address when this happens. These third party advertisers may also download cookies to your computer, or use other technologies such as JavaScript and "web beacons" (also known as "1x1 gifs") to measure the effectiveness of their ads and to personalize advertising content.
See original here.
Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on mine.
I had re-joined some social networking sites recently, and this was my pretense. However, it made me realize that if these "old friends" were such great people, I would have kept in touch with them. With each "old friend", I realized that there was some fatal flaw that made me not want to keep in touch with them anyway.
Honestly, how long do you want to dwell in the past? The future is so wide open...