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Posts Tagged ‘cookies’

Facebook respond to tracking cookie accusations

September 28th, 2011 No comments

I wrote in January about the faculty Facebook may possess for tracking your browsing history. I made brief mention of the fact that logging out of Facebook may not prevent further tracking. It’s this last point that caused a stir this week as Nik Cubrilovic’s post got picked up by the press.

His follow-up post describes Facebook’s response, but the ‘tracking’ cookie to which I was referring has not been removed. According to Nik’s post, Facebook admit this will remain after logout to track the browser, but for ‘safety and spam purposes’.

According to this WSJ article, ‘not all of the data is logged’. That’s good.

The bottom line for me is that Facebook are so powerful that they need to be as answerable to their populous as a government. That means a certain level of transparency and being clear about their intentions. If they go back on their word, who holds them accountable? Are our laws even adequate? Should Facebook be audited, or should we just trust them?

I don’t expect I’d be too happy about having my servers audited, but I’m not Facebook. When nearly half a billion people log into your site each day to give you their data, you have a serious amount of responsibility on your shoulders.

Read more…

Is Facebook tracking your web browsing history?

January 7th, 2011 6 comments

I recently saw this paper: “Facebook Tracks and Traces Everyone: Like This!
(download the PDF)

Short version

Zuckerberg's 'open' and 'connected' world

Every time you merely visit a site that displays a Like button, data is sent to Facebook which includes the address of the site you are visiting. Assuming you’ve also logged into Facebook, they have all the information they would need to associate these external page views with your Facebook identity.

What are they actually doing with this data? Possibly nothing, but I don’t see any statement saying “Don’t worry, we don’t store web page URLs you view, even though we could“. The usual guff about ‘anonymized’ data and cookies being required for functionality doesn’t quite cut it with me. This is Big Brother stuff, and they need to be crystal clear about what they could do and what they are doing. Read more…