What Facebook's Privacy Policy Allows May Surprise You

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 26 March 2018 15:58 IST

To get an idea of the data Facebook collects about you, just ask for it. You'll get a file with every photo and comment you've posted, all the ads you've clicked on, stuff you've liked and searched for and everyone you've friended - and unfriended - over the years.

This trove of data is used to decide which ads to show you. It also makes using Facebook more seamless and enjoyable - say, by determining which posts to emphasise in your feed, or reminding you of friends' birthdays.

Advertisement

Facebook claims to protect all this information, and it lays out its terms in a privacy policy that's relatively clear and concise. But few users bother to read it. You might be surprised at what Facebook's privacy policy allows - and what's left unsaid.


Facebook's privacy practices have come under fire after a Trump-affiliated political consulting firm, Cambridge Analytica, got data inappropriately from millions of Facebook users. While past privacy debacles have centred on what marketers gather on users, the stakes are higher this time because the firm is alleged to have created psychological profiles to influence how people vote or even think about politics and society.

Advertisement

Facebook defends its data collection and sharing activities by noting that it's adhering to a privacy policy it shares with users. Thanks largely to years of privacy scandals and pressure from users and regulators, Facebook also offers a complex set of controls that let users limit how their information is used - to a point.

You can turn off ad targeting and see generic ads instead, the way you would on television or in a newspaper. In the ad settings, you'd need to uncheck all your interests, interactions with companies and websites and other personal information you don't want to use in targeting. Of course, if you click on a new interest after this, you'll have to go back and uncheck it in your ad preferences to prevent targeting. It's a tedious task.

Advertisement

As Facebook explains, it puts you in target categories based on your activity. So, if you are 35, live in Seattle and have liked an outdoor adventure page, Facebook may show you an ad for a mountain bike shop in your area.

But activity isn't limited to pages or posts you like, comments you make and your use of outside apps and websites.

Advertisement

"If you start typing something and change your mind and delete it, Facebook keeps those and analyses them too," Zeynep Tufekci, a prominent techno-sociologist, said in a 2017 TED talk .

And, increasingly, Facebook tries to match what it knows about you with your offline data, purchased from data brokers or gathered in other ways. The more information it has, the fuller the picture of you it can offer to advertisers. It can infer things about you that you had no intention of sharing - anything from your ethnicity to personality traits, happiness and use of addictive substances, Tufekci said.

These types of data collection aren't necessarily explicit in privacy policies or settings.

What Facebook does say is that advertisers don't get the raw data. They just tell Facebook what kind of people they want their ads to reach, then Facebook makes the matches and shows the ads.

Apps can also collect a lot of data about you, as revealed in the Cambridge Analytica scandal. The firm got the data from a researcher who paid 270,000 Facebook users to complete a psychological profile quiz back in 2014. But the quiz gathered information on their friends as well, bringing the total number of people affected to about 50 million.

Facebook says Cambridge Analytica got the data inappropriately - but only because the app said it collected data for research rather than political profiling. Gathering data on friends was permitted at the time, even if they had never installed the app or given explicit consent.

Ian Bogost, a Georgia Tech communications professor who built a tongue-in-cheek game called Cow Clicker in 2010, wrote in The Atlantic recently that abusing the Facebook platform for "deliberately nefarious ends" was easy to do then. What's worse, he said, it was hard to avoid extracting private data.

If "you played Cow Clicker, even just once, I got enough of your personal data that, for years, I could have assembled a reasonably sophisticated profile of your interests and behaviour," he wrote. "I might still be able to; all the data is still there, stored on my private server, where Cow Clicker is still running, allowing players to keep clicking where a cow once stood."

Facebook has since restricted the amount of types of data apps can access. But other types of data collection are still permitted. For this reason, it's a good idea to check all the apps you've given permissions to over the years. You can also do this in your settings.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Here Is How to Watch NASA's Artemis II Lunar Flyby Live
  2. Casio AE-1600HX Series Launched With Up to 10 Years of Battery Life
  3. How NASA Approved iPhone 17 Pro Max for Artemis 2 Mission
  4. Realme 16 5G With 7,000mAh Battery Goes on Sale in India: See Offers
  5. Infinix Note 60 Pro Design, Colourways Revealed as India Launch Nears
  6. Redmi A7 Pro 5G Will Launch in India on This Date
  7. iPhone Fold Tipped to Use 3D Printed Hinge to Achieve Minimal Crease
  8. Oppo Pad Mini SPecifications Leak Ahead of Launch in China
  9. Here's When Xiaomi 17 Max Could Be Launched: See Expected Price, Features
  10. Netflix Told to Cut Prices, Issue Refunds After Italy Court Ruling
  1. Infinix Note 60 Pro Design, Colour Options Revealed as India Launch Nears
  2. Rubaab OTT Release: Where to Watch This Marathi Film Online?
  3. The Best Thing Now Available for Streaming Online: Where to Watch, Plot, Cast, and More
  4. Thaai Kizhavi OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  5. Meta Reportedly Halts Work With AI Partner Mercor After Data Breach Incident
  6. Crimson Desert Gets New Patch With Extra Storage Capacity, Headgear Visibility Option and More Improvements
  7. IT Workers From North Korea Have Been Infiltrating DeFi Platforms for Past 7 Years
  8. Redmi A7 Pro 5G India Launch Date Announced; Design, Key Features Teased
  9. Xiaomi 17 Max Launch Timeline, Price Range Tipped Along With Key Specifications, Features
  10. Moto Razr Fold Set to Launch Soon in Select Global Markets; UK Pre-Reservations to Start This Week
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.