February 15, 2017

Did You Know Facebook Watches You Even While You’re Away Or Logged Out?

Do you guys know that Facebook watches you even while you are away or logged out? According to the new reports, Facebook is tracking which sites its 800million s visit – even after they have signed out. Company employees are also able to watch where people who are not of the social-networking site go online if they have just viewed Facebook once.

FB watches you

Facebook collects lots of data about its s and it is no secret. As per these reports, a less well-known fact was known and i.e. the site not only watches its active s but even those who don’t have an .

The tracking means that every time an internet being followed clicks on to a third-party page which has a Facebook plug-in attached, such as the popular ‘Like’ widget, a record is sent back to the company. According to Facebook, the data is used to boost security and improve the quality of the plug-ins and not to gather personal information to promote -specific ads.

What you should do to prevent “Big Brother” from spying on you:

Spying

It helps create efficient and personalized advertising. The Tracking Web Activity allows Facebook to learn the ’s preferences and show them ads they will most likely be interested in.

Facebook Spying

They do more than we think and even things we didn’t indicate. Your ad preferences, address, phone number, education, income, cost and area of your house, all these can be acquired through you and your friends’ Internet activity analysis. This information will stay in the database almost forever even you delete your .

Facebook watches you

Researchers state that tracking can even occur without any interaction with Facebook services. According to the study published by the Belgian Commission for the Protection of Privacy, it says that Facebook tracks sites visited even by those s who never created an  on the social network. This is possible because of cookie files and social network plug-ins.

Don’t worry, there is a safety guide given by data analysis specialists:

How can I protect myself

  • Try not to post too much personal info.
  • Don’t post photographs of your children, especially if they’re not old enough to give their consent.
  • Log out of Facebook when you’re done using it, or use separate browsers for different activities.
  • Use ad blockers.
  • Don’t install Facebook Messenger on your phone. Use the mobile website instead.

These recommendations will be of use for all Internet s:

Privacy Settings

  • On iPhone or iPad, select Settings > Confidentiality > Advertising,and enable the Limit Ad Tracking 
  • On Android devices, select Settings > Google > Ads Settings, and turn off Ads Personalization.
  • In the Chrome browser (or any other — their settings are similar), open Settings > Show advanced settings > Privacy, and check the box that says Send a “Do Not Track” request with your browsing traffic.

Settings In Browser:

Browser Settings

There aren’t any laws making organizations stand by this prohibition, but Facebook and some other companies have signed an agreement that ties them to respect the unwillingness of s to be under surveillance.

Facebook

About the author 

Imran Uddin


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