[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Science-Technology Title: Facebook Atlas: Giving Advertisers Invasive Maps of Your Life Facebook has quietly introduced a new service for advertisers called Facebook Atlas, and were giving it a thumbs down because its not good for your privacy. Like an atlas, it offers a collection of maps, but these maps show the whereabouts and activities of Internet users whether Facebook subscribers or not. These detailed maps are chock full of tidbits about the online and offline lives of consumers and your life is most likely in this collection, whether you like it or not. You may think you can protect yourself online by deleting cookies and enabling the do not track feature in your browser, but Facebook Atlas has been designed to overcome these limitations. In fact, its peoples new-found privacy consciousness thats driving marketers to develop surveillance methods like Atlas that are difficult to escape from. These days, most of us use multiple electronic devices to access the Internet, which makes it harder for marketers to track and profile people and their purchases. Its also difficult for marketers to gauge the success of targeted ads if they cant follow up on your purchase behavior to see if the ad worked. For example, if you browse an online store with your iPhone and later make a purchase at a brick and mortar store, or place an order through your tablet or desktop computer, its hard to link the two events. These blind spots are frustrating to marketers who want to know everything about you. They also crave the ability to watch those consumers who have the nerve to delete cookies or turn on do not track on their devices to help protect their privacy. Enter services like Atlas, designed to collect and consolidate information about everyone, no matter what devices they use, what cookies they delete or where they choose to shop. Atlas learns what devices people use by tracking their sign ins to Facebook and to a network of partner sites. Then it follows online activities like ad clicks using a wide variety of trackers, including persistent cookies and web beacons that are more difficult to delete. Atlas can also update your marketing profile by recording searches you do at non-private search engines and may use information gleaned from free email services that carefully analyze every message that passes through their servers. Heres a list of possible sources they might use, straight from the companys privacy policy: Atlas does not honor do not track requests set in peoples browsers. If you read through the lines of its carefully crafted privacy policy, Atlas states that even if you opt out of targeted advertising through the Network Advertising Initiative or Digital Advertising Alliance Consumer Choice Page, theyll still track your behavior and store it they just wont serve you personalized ads. Gee, thanks! Check out their policy for yourselves, foks. It doesnt get much more invasive than this: Unfortunately, Facebooks Atlas isnt the only company doing this kind of no-holds-barred consumer activity mapping. Its the latest marketing trend. But lets face it. Facebook has a huge snooping advantage because so many people use its social media service and often do so on multiple devices. Being tracked is not only offensive, its dangerous to our privacy and our civil liberties. Once a private company has your information, the government can get its hands on it, too. Here are a few ways to help minimize your exposure to these ramped up information collection schemes: Til next time, Katherine & Liz Join the privacy revolution by switching to StartPage.com the private search engine, and using StartMail.com encrypted email, both projects Katherine has helped develop. You can catch Katherine on radio daily at www.kmashow.com. And please read our book, Spychips, to learn more about privacy-invading technology and how to defeat it. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 10.
#1. To: TooConservative (#0)
I wish zuckerburg would choke on Obama next time they meet.
Zuck's power is derived from people being so ignorant about his data collection and selling their info to anybody for any purpose. Facebook definitely wants to get in bed with Big Gov. Already have actually. A lot of good advice here. Ghostery, NoScript, AdBlock Plus, and using DuckDuckGo or StartPage/Ixquick are a very good way to start shielding yourself from the tycoons'
About everyone in my family uses facebook. They don't care about that stuff. Except my two brothers like me have never signed up. Everyone else has though. Parents, wife, kids etc. I got pissed at my mom for posting my pic on there. I don't want my face auto tagged. Maybe I need to make a facebook page and have everyone go to my "funeral" because I died.
A friend and I both stay off Facebook. It is such a huge scam. If there was any kind of investigative reporting in the media now, they would have blown the whistle on them long ago. Google is quite invasive but they at least keep the info to themselves to generate all their sidebar ads. Facebook monetizes it by selling to all kinds of groups. Facebook also got caught manipulating news feeds in the 2014 elections, testing how many weak-minded indy voters might be aroused to go vote by feeding them certain news stories on election day. No doubt, a new tactic the Left will be exploiting. We have to move people away from the Big Left data miners like Google and especially Facebook. Facebook is the open sewer of the internet. And using DDG/Ixquick for search is also quite effective at anonymizing your web searches.
While on active duty and given my access, I had to bow out of FB. Still won't do it.
There are no replies to Comment # 10. End Trace Mode for Comment # 10.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
|
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|