Facebook Buys Data From Third-Party Brokers To Fill In User Profiles (ibtimes.com) 116
An anonymous reader quotes a report from International Business Times: According to a report from ProPublica, the world's largest social network knows far more about its users than just what they do online. What Facebook can't glean from a user's activity, it's getting from third-party data brokers. ProPublica found the social network is purchasing additional information including personal income, where a person eats out and how many credit cards they keep. That data all comes separate from the unique identifiers that Facebook generates for its users based on interests and online behavior. A separate investigation by ProPublica in which the publication asked users to report categories of interest Facebook assigned to them generated more than 52,000 attributes. The data Facebook pays for from other brokers to round out user profiles isn't disclosed by the company beyond a note that it gets information "from a few different sources." Those sources, according to ProPublica, come from commercial data brokers who have access to information about people that isn't linked directly to online behavior. The social network doesn't disclose those sources because the information isn't collected by Facebook and is publicly available. Facebook does provide a page in its help center that details how to get removed from the lists held by third-party data brokers. However, the process isn't particularly easy. In the case of the Oracle-owned Datalogix, users who want off the list have to send a written request and a copy of a government-issued identification in the mail to Oracle's chief privacy officer. Another data collecting service, Acxiom, requires users provide the last four digits of their social security number to see the information the company has gathered about them.
NO! (Score:2)
Really?
YES! (Score:5, Funny)
Zuck on It.
Re:NO! (Score:5, Informative)
Worse than that is, even if you don't have an account, FB already has one for you, just waiting to be activated. Because your friends, family, and private databases sold you out.
Fuck the Zuck.
Re: NO! (Score:5, Informative)
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I don't have Facebook, LinkedIn or a smartphone at the moment. I dislike Android too, am waiting for a Linux phone.
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The Jolla is a Linux phone.
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There's going to be an interesting transition in society as people who grew up with 'always on/share everything' get smacked in the face with the stupid stuff that they (and I!) did 20 years ago. Until those same people are in upper management and making those decisions...it's going to make for a very lean candidate pool.
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avoid the primary keys.
give noone your phone number. The phone number is often used to link profiles together, as its unique and hard to change.
Do not install apps from untrusted companies (like facebook, microsoft, etc.), they will collect your phone number, be aware that your phone os knows the number (i.e. google, apple have this identifier already).
use different e-mail adresses. A a domain is cheap, a catch all with forward to your mailaccount is free with most dns hosters.
Do they really need to know yo
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AFAIK, they already do. Any app you install needs to require explicit permissions from you to access things like location, contacts, etc, and you can change your mind either way, at any point in time.
And AFAIK, Google has *finally* pulled their thumb out and added privacy controls to the latest versions of android. I haven't used Android in a while so I can't remember exactly when they did that. I think it was v6. But since the overwhelming majority of people use 6, that doesn't mean much.
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Sorry, I meant on the iOS platform, Applications can ask.
Android, on the other hand, was *designed* to slurp as much of your personal data as it possibly could. Recent versions are finally making an attempt to close the barn doors, but in the mean time all the myriad developers had already long ago built a high-speed conveyor belt so that horses could shoot through at breathtaking speed.
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Your friends have apps with access to their contacts among a multitude of other permissions.
They Sold you out long ago
My friends don't have Facebook accounts either. So how does this work again?
Re: NO! (Score:2, Informative)
Your friends have cell phones.
Cell phones have apps.
Apps may have access to your contacts.
You are a contact.
Sold out.
Re: NO! (Score:1)
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Worse than that is, even if you don't have an account, FB already has one for you, just waiting to be activated. Because your friends, family, and private databases sold you out.
Fuck the Zuck.
Heh heh.. World 2004 - Love the Zuck. World 2010 - Hate the Zuck. World 2016+ - Fuck the Zuck.
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So it would -- were I on FB (or any of my email accounts) with my real name, birthday etc. #sorry_Zuck
You don't have to have an account. If people you know have a FB account and the app, and have you in their contacts, they already have a profile on you. And with your phone number and email address, they can buy all your online activity from all these online analytics companies to build up a FB profile even though you've never signed up. #you_lose
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Muahahahahaha! (Score:1)
Yes, my little piggies, soon I'll know EVERYTHING about you!
-Mark Z
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Yes, my little piggies, soon I'll know EVERYTHING about you!
-Mark Z
So what? His wife is ugly and his house is small. The guy is not even enjoying his billions.
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His wife is ugly ...
Because having a trophy is far more important than a partner who understands his friends and is good in bed and the kitchen.
He can afford to rent his toys and anything else, besides, why is conspicuous consumption the measure of success?
I've worked with that data (Score:3, Interesting)
the third party data is gathered from re sellers of data grabbed by the "win prize" folks and oil change places, and pert damn everywhere where they ask you for name/address/phone - as well as trawling public records.
Then to make sure they have a monthly supply of fraction of a cent commodity they mingle the data by moving names/numbers/addresses.
I found that out when I started to data mine the stuff our business bought and didn't find myself, but found a few references to my address being owned by different people.
Most of the data out there is worthless garbage. People like me sign up as Tripod McBallsington, living at an address in the zip code of 98210, with a phone number of 1-800-555-1212.
And my email address is always on somethingmadeup@mailinator.com.
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People like me sign up as Tripod McBallsington, living at an address in the zip code of 98210, with a phone number of 1-800-555-1212. And my email address is always on somethingmadeup@mailinator.com.
Wait... I am Tripod McBallsington!
Are you the reason I keep getting all this spam mail? Wait till I find you, what is your name?
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Tripod McBallsington, can't you read?
Re: I've worked with that data (Score:2)
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I prefer Kinki Wankinnen, Finnish expat racing driver :-)
Don't be afraid of the NSA, be afriad of Facebook. (Score:1)
Zuckerberg's mission at this point is to literally be Big Brother, from surveillance to media censorship to policing thoughtcrime. (Obviously Trump is Goldstein.) The face-cages with the rats are next.
And since FB is a private entity there's no pesky Constitution to worry about.
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And since FB is a private entity there's no pesky Constitution to worry about.
Yes, because private companies never have to worry about running afoul of Constitutional issues.
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Pretty much, yeah.
The US constitution restricts the government, remember?
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Pretty much, yeah.
The US constitution restricts the government, remember?
So I can refuse service to blacks, or refuse to hire women, or put up a calendar of sexy women? Hmmm. Maybe all those companies and bosses that were punished for those actions should call you for expert legal advice.
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You apparently don't understand even the first thing about the US constitution.
Again, it imposes restrictions on the government, not on private corporations. The only way the constitution relates to your ability to refuse to hire racial minorities, is in whether or not it's unconstitutional for the government to ban you from doing it.
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I admit I was not thinking straight on that one.
In my brain, I was thinking of the private sector anti-discrimination suits, and tying them into the government anti-discrimination suits. Private sector anti-discrimination is of course set by laws, federal and state. The Constitution prohibits various discriminatory practices for governments, or government run institutions like public colleges. Somehow, those two different situations got mingled in my brain in my first post.
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Gotcha. Forgive my snark.
Re:Don't be afraid of the NSA, be afriad of Facebo (Score:4, Interesting)
What if the Facebook is a front for an intelligence agency?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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nice link, i enjoyed it...
Front not needed (Score:1)
Who needs a front when you can make all that profit selling to both advertisers and intelligence agencies as a business?
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F, FB, FBI, I see where this is going...
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An image removed/hidden within 12 hours a few years ago might still exist.
That material is then packaged to Fortune 500 brands to look back over the top resumes that get considered. Did a person party? Drink? Drugs? Are they political on the left or right? Any links to undercover journalism? Any interesting people in group photos years ago?
Other nat
I don't use Facebook (Score:1)
I don't use the site, so I don't care what they do with your personal information.
Re: I don't use Facebook (Score:1)
Ha. But what about yours? Because they have it too. It's called shadow accounts. They are created by facebook using stuff that people tell facebook about you. "You know M. X? Can you help us making sure you have the right one? What is his street address? His phone number? ..." you would be surprised at how many people are willing to sell you out.
Re:I don't use Facebook (Score:5, Insightful)
Then one day your friend (who is on Facebook) sends you an email with a video invite to her birthday party. You click to play the video. The video is hosted by Facebook, and now based on your click-through, Facebook knows your email address. Based on their cookie stored in your browser, they now know that your email address is user 1348752983, and all the other info they've been collecting about you is now linked to your email address in their servers. Based on your email and other data they have, they deduce your name, cross-reference that to this info they're buying from other services. And now they know your full name, age, address, where you work, roughly how much you make, which high school you went to, who you're dating,
They know all this even though you don't have a Facebook account. Crap like this is why I started browsing everything in incognito/private mode, in addition to the half dozen script, cookie, and tracker blockers I run. I'm not really a private person (the government has my fingerprints and iris scans thanks to the Nexus program I had to join to work crossing the border every day). I just do this because of the principle of the thing - if you want to be gathering info like this about me, at least have the decency to ask for my permission first. Otherwise you're just a digital stalker. And stalking should not be a legitimate business model.
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This seems like the end.. (Score:2)
What do I do? Make a profile and delete it?
Re: This seems like the end.. (Score:1)
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Re:Block them (Score:5, Informative)
I assure you, blocking the ads doesn't change the data collection aspect of most adservers. Disabled javascript (80%) and image loading (19%), you eliminate most of the tracking....excepting your cellphone. Nothing stops collection on that device. Having worked on a host of adservers, I'm surprised at how the biggest problems are scaling and manipulating large data, not the complexity of gathering data.
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If it is available, install Firefox as your mobile browser, then install uBlock Origin. Enable your favorite filters and enjoy much less mobile advertising and tracking.
tor is available for android.
Also remember cross site stalking (Score:3)
If your not completely blocking Facebook domains they will also stalk you as you move from website to website thanks to globally pervasive social media bugs installed on websites throughout the Internet.
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Indeed. I think I have enough of them, especially as what they do is criminal here (you may not save any user data without explicit permission, and I did not ever permit them to do anything).
Have a link to a list of all their domains/subnets so I can put them into my firewall?
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> especially as what they do is criminal here...I did not ever permit them to do anything
If you use their services in any way then you are permitting them.
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Not true at all. EU law is far ahead in this regard. They need to explicitly ask. And even if they do and I say yes, I can order them at any time to delete all my data and they have to do it. Storing and correlating data on people that do not have consented and that do not have an account with them is a criminal act.
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You're agreeing with me. Look at the terms you agreed to when you signed up with facebook.
Isn't it time we make our own? (Score:3)
Isn't it time for a distributed, open source, facebook competitor? One where you can _choose_ which FB-provider you want to use (or just run on your own server if you want), and migrate your account if need be. One where you retain ownership over your comments and your data and your f'ing life?
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I don't mean creating our own service, and then _still_ handing our data over to some 3rd party. What I meant was creating a service like email - something that runs at every provider, giving people a choice of whether to place their "social" account with one provider or with another - or be entirely self-hosted, if they're up for that.
The license is less relevant in that sense. The software itself can be GPL. And for the data you entrust to it, different providers might have different terms, but since ther
They all do it... (Score:5, Informative)
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> Many of these companies know a lot more about you than even YOU know about you
bullshit, paranoid I'm-clever-than-you-can-possibly-think-look-how-much-secret-stuff-I-know post.
> they can track your HABITS
No they can't.
> They can track your LOCATION
No they can't if you disable all the stuff they use for tracking and have a nonfixed IP - duh.
> They can even track you based on on the type of porn you look at
lie
> and sell personalized products/services to you or worse
being as I never see an adve
Facebook: the future as nightmare .. (Score:2)
Could facebook be next? Please... (Score:2)
Only reason to what is claim in the article is to enrich... aka verify data.
The irony is that if your just a little bit more honest .... people will give your their data. You just have to show reasonably that it won't bite them in the ass.
If your a marketer then advocate stronger banking regulation. Actually if your totally honest then you should be devising the next replacement for cash and selling it to the world governments.
Advertising has always been grey on both ends yet it might equal 40 percent of e