Facebook Is Using Your Phone's Location To Suggest New Friends (fusion.net)
Fusion's Kashmir Hill is reporting that Facebook is using your phone's location to suggest new friends. It's unclear exactly when the social juggernaut began doing this, but a number of instances suggest it only started recently. From the report:Last week, I met a man who suspected Facebook had tracked his location to figure out who he was meeting with. He was a dad who had recently attended a gathering for suicidal teens. The next morning, he told me, he opened Facebook to find that one of the anonymous parents at the gathering popped up as a "person you may know." [...] "People You May Know are people on Facebook that you might know," a Facebook spokesperson said. "We show you people based on mutual friends, work and education information, networks you're part of, contacts you've imported and many other factors." One of those factors is smartphone location. A Facebook spokesperson said though that shared location alone would not result in a friend suggestion, saying that the two parents must have had something else in common, such as overlapping networks.While this feature could be useful in some cases, many may -- and they should -- see it as a big invasion of their privacy -- Hill has succinctly explained a number of them.
"The friend request is coming FROM INSIDE THE HOUSE!"
Linux, you magnificent bastard, I read the fucking manual!
"Facebook is using your phone's location to suggest new friends."
How does it do that? I don't have a Facebook account, nor a Facebook app on my phone.
Just say "no" to the Bookface.
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
uninstall the facebook app and use the browser instead
Satan is holding a contest between Google, Facebook, Microsoft, and Oracle to see which company can be most evil. At present, unusually, Microsoft is trailing. Microsoft is not so much evil as just stupid.
This would be a great way to get to know the full identities of the other fun members of your AA group.
I noticed this a few months back. I noticed that I was getting a lot more friend suggestions of people that I didn't know, which was the first thing that made me curious. Facebook had always been suggesting that I friend people when I had mutual friends with that person, but suddenly it was suggesting that I friend people that I didn't recognize, and with whom I shared no mutual friends. So I started paying a bit more attention.
Then I noticed that, among the random strangers, there were a few people that I did know but did not have any mutual Facebook friends and hadn't checked in at the same locations or anything else. That was my first tip-off that Facebook was trying to do something clever to link up friends, so I scanned the suggestions again looking for a possible pattern. Then I noticed that some of the strangers looked familiar. It took me a second to place them, but they were people who lived in the same apartment building or worked in the same office building. In some cases, it was people who lived in a nearby apartment building and got coffee from the same place that I did.
They're definitely using location data to match people up. My only question is whether it's tracking your location all the time, only when the app is open, or only when you post.
do everything they want to.
I was thinking almost as nefariously. "Jarred wants to be your friend."
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
It recommends also based on login IP. So you get your neighbors even though you have never met them.
How does that do anything extra to protect your location? Your phone has a built-in GPS chip.
I've been wondering why FB was suggesting so many agents as friends...
Be right back, someone's knocking at my door.
Facebook Is Using Your Phone's Location To Suggest New Friends
Facebook isn't using my phone to do anything. These shitty clickbait headlines are getting everywhere. Some of us are capable of being interested in things without having to have them directly linked to our own personal wellbeing.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
It had to be in the last update to the iOS app on June 24th. I was very recently traveling with a group of people who all carried smartphones, but we never shared any information, photos or tagged each other. Basically, all communications were off the grid between us.
When I returned from my trip, several of the people from the group were in the "People you may know" section.
TFA even tells you how to turn off Facebook's ability to use your location data.
Choices. Knowledge. I believe it's still opt-in. Is it not?
... and bitching about invasion of privacy is a little hypocritical.
Answer "no" when the browser asks to use your location information.
I only read the post body. Titles are just that - titles. OP did not indicate that they don't use the app anywhere I should be expected to read.
There's a word for that...
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Abandon? Please. Be creative, start trolling!
There is one thing an statistician fears more than having no data: Having poisoned data. Data where it is impossible to tell whether the data you have is real or fake, and what information is good and which is bogus. Because having little data means you at least have a little bit of data. Having poisoned data means you have no data at all to work with.
Poison the data well and watch the empire crumble.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
Go to jail because someone had the same idea but was faster.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
I only turn on location access for the Facebook app (and my web browser) when I travel, so right now it thinks I'm about 2,200 miles away from where I actually am...
Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
AC didn't consider that there are probably plenty of other apps that sell the user's location data to Facebook.
I don't know what you guys are rambling on about, I see an opportunity to not be swindled by those w4m "$ervice$". F*c*book, quit slacking and gimme my updated list of potential "friend$" already!
Neutral.. to matters that do not directly concern me
Last year I was dropping my daughter off at a friend's house. The friend's dad met me at the door and we chatted. It was the first time that we had ever talked about anything. Literally just met the guy. In our conversation, we mentioned an app that he just started using (and was in fact using when I pulled up). It's an app that I would never use since it was about Golf and I don't play or care about golf. Before I pulled out of his driveway I checked Facebook. I kid you not, an ad for that app was on my news feed. I'd never seen it before, ever. Somehow they correlated his installation of the app, with my account, and showed me something that there was a chance we discussed. Twilight Zone stuff, I tell you.
Monitor bandwidth usage on IIS6 in real-time: http://www.waetech.com/services/iisbm/
I use an app that puts out fake GPS data for other apps. They all think I hang out at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave all day.
Facebook would have to be pretty retarded to NOT have this obvious feature. I'd be rather shocked if it wasn't added a very long time ago.
It's suggesting that I friend the creepy guy outside in the bushes...
You are the product, not the customer when it comes to facebook.
Mean what you say...say what you mean.
I'd like a friend in her 20s, maybe 30s, with big tits please?
-Styopa
Yet another reason I will never install their "Messenger" app on my phone
Wh47 d1d j00 541, 31337 15n't t3h r0xor5 ne m0r3???
...is deny it access to my contacts. And fight the fight over and over, because they won't take 'no' for an answer for very long.
Along with some other privacy settings I keep having to remake. It's relentless, almost as bad as dealing with the U.S. Government.
And yes, I reinstall FB occasionally on my Android devices, giving them an opportunity to sneak in those settings again. I notice they've moved the 'Most Recent' choice of listings further and further down the line, trying to convince me to accept their idea of what I'm most interested at the moment. And they are wrong.
deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
My teenage daughter says nobody uses Facebook anymore anyway, since all their parents are on it now...
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
LinkedIn is even worse... I'm pretty sure it lies and sends a message to the people you are stalking telling them that you want to "connect" with them...
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
There are actually plugins that can do that. Unfortunately they are easy to filter out as noise.
Data poisoning is something you have to do by hand. It doesn't take as much work as it sounds, but it isn't something you can offload easily onto some plugin if you want it to work out.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
. . . I don't use Facebook
Yes, but please allow us to have a laugh at those who do.
I've got a patched facebook APK which gets rid of the location tracking crap, along with some other social crapware (and most ads). It's about one version old now, so it might nag you to update. The patches are a bitch to rebase, so I only do it every few versions. Warning- self-signed APK, so trust me at your own risk. http://www.club.cc.cmu.edu/~sm...
http://www.merriam-webster.com...
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
I can't say I'm surprised by this.
Since I'm not interested in being notified every time someone messages me, I only access FB from a browser, even on my phone, and my browser does not have access to my location. This worked fine up until a couple of weeks ago when their mobile website stopped supporting messaging, instead popping up with a helpful advertisement to install the Facebook Messenger app.
I downloaded it for fun and looked at the list of permissions it asked for - it was taller than my screen. Much taller. Clearly they want access to everything.
Now I just use the Desktop version of the website.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
To the facebook AI get access to the unprotected CCTV cameras around the world and go full "samaritan"?
Facebook has been suggesting my neighbors as friends for a few years now, I assume it's suggesting based on gps proximity, and has been for quite a while.