Facebook's "Hello" Tells You Who's Calling Before You Pick Up
Mark Wilson writes: When you receive a call you'll usually see the number of the caller, but this may not be helpful in identifying them before you decide whether to pick up. Facebook's answer to this problem is Hello. This new app comes from the Facebook Messenger team and aims to tell you more about the person getting in touch with you even if you don't have their number saved in your address book. Currently available for Android, the dialer app also allows for the blocking of calls from individuals.
Innovative!
innovating like its 1999
Once again, your identity is being used in ways you didn't approve. Now when you call a business or a non-personal contact -- they'll know all about you.
What kind of obsolete phone have you been using?
This is yet another reason not to give Facebook your phone number (or any other real/valuable personal information)
Also, not sure about other people, but for callers who didn't make their name private I see the name on my iPhone (not that it matters).
Caller ID itself has taken a sharp face plant, IMHO, what with the ability of telemarketers to disguise their true origins with a local cover number. It's possible the Facebook has maximized its ability to innovate, and this is all that's left to go on about.
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Didn't LinkedIn get in trouble for doing this a while back? They ended up mining everyone's address books and then leaking that data out to anyone and everyone based on received calls? What are the privacy controls on this?
You install a Facebook app on your phone, it knows your number and broadcasts it to people who are also using the facebook app. There's a laundry list of apps that do this already.
This also brings up more reason to have disposable phone numbers.
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
here ya go: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
This is nothing more than facebook wanting phone call data. The advantage for users is almost nonexistent. Its the modern way of stealing (or as they put it in their shiny presentations "harvesting") data.
If you're running a CRM at your work and use Asterisk to send a text message or email to a link to that customers information. Works great in the field. Not a new or novel idea.
Sig: I stole this sig.
Facebook wants MORE access to peoples devices?
NOPE.
I do not fancy myself being a product and having my information bought and sold by unknown entities.
I also don't see this app working terribly well unless whomevers calling you also has it.
Have gnu, will travel.
"Facebook" instead of "Google". its a good idea
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Because you use Facebook.
"If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
This will be a good excuse to force Google to allow users to revoke certain app permissions. It will eventually happen and this aids to it..
But not before storing this metadata along with your present location and any other personal information they can get you to give them access to.
When will people learn?
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
This is for people with phones that have limited features,
You str it up well, but overlooked something... the app is only for Android.
SELF IMMOLATION
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I have no idea if it does this - but what if the Facebook app allowed you to mark a call as spam after you had taken it, and if more than ten or so people did in a short period of time have it come up with "POTENTIAL SPAM" in the description?
Lets say the service fully randomizes the callerID for every caller (like the ones that pretend they are your number, even though that's not random). Facebook could still know there is a "wave" of fraudulent calls and alert you that an odd name or number calling right then may well be a spammer.
I've thought Apple could do the exact same thing if it kept track of numbers everyone blocked, with your (defaulted to no) permission of course.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
What's the deal? I'd think I was crazy except my parents still have a landline, and when someone calls them the name for that number pops right up. Just like it has for almost 20 years.
Why is this broken on cellphones, anyway?
I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
FaceBok Hello? Uh, yea. About that. Firefox just introduced 'Hello' as a voice and video chat solution.
So, no, FaceBook. No Hello for you.
Mozilla has your ass dead to rights, and I hope they sue and REFUSE to settle.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Only, worse. Since telemarketers probably don't bother creating a FB page. So FB won't notify you of that. TrueCaller gathers information by uploading your contacts list to their servers. And doing the same from millions of people who use. Is this a crazy breach of privacy - sure, it is - but so is everything about Facebook. Telemarketers hate it since once a few of report it as a spam call, it shows up with a warning saying as much when the same person calls someone else. Oh, and you can block that number too.
This already exists and its called Caller ID by Google, and its a standard Android feature.
This relies on users being stupid enough to give Facebook their phone number (in case the god-awful happens and they forget their password) in the first place.
If it doesn't catch on, at least there's always money in the Banana Stand.
Before you pick up. Next up - publicly visible "A called B" post on your wall with like and comment buttons.