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Senin, 24 Juni 2013

Facebook’s Creepy Data-Grabbing Ways Make It The Borg Of The Digital World

Facebook's Creepy Data-Grabbing Ways Make It The Borg Of The Digital World

The latest Facebook data breach – which exposed personal contact

information Facebook had harvested on six million of its users – is a

reminder that even if you're not handing over all your contact data to

Facebook, Facebook is obtaining and triangulating that data anyway.

And even if you're not on Facebook yourself, your contact data likely

is because the social network is building a shadow profile of you by

data-mining other people.



You might never join Facebook but a zombie you — sewn together from

scattered bits of your personal data — is still sitting there in

sort-of-stasis on its servers. Waiting to be properly animated if you

do sign up for the service. Or waiting to escape through the cracks of

another security flaw in Facebook's systems.



Facebook is a crowd-fuelled data-mining machine that's now so massive

(1.11 billion monthly active users as of March 2013) it doesn't matter

if you haven't ever signed up yourself to sign over your personal

data. It has long since passed the tipping point where it can act as a

distributed data network that knows something about almost everyone.

Or everyone who leaves any kind of digital/cellular trace that can be

fed into its data banks.



Chances are someone you have corresponded with — by email or mobile

phone — has let Facebook's data spiders crawl through their

correspondence, thereby allowing your contact data to be assimilated

entirely without your knowledge or consent. One such example was

flagged to TechCrunch on Saturday when one of the users informed by

Facebook they had been affected by its latest breach found it had

harvested an email address they had never personally handed over.



This behaviour casts Facebook as the Borg of the digital world:

resistance is futile. It also underlines exactly why the NSA wants a

backdoor into this type of digital treasure trove store. If you're

going to outsource low-level surveillance of everyone then Facebook is

one of a handful of tech companies large enough to have files on

almost everyone. So really, forget the futuristic Borg: this ceaseless

data-harvesting brings to mind the dossier-gathering attention to

detail of the Stasi.



Does this matter? That depends on whether you care about privacy —

your own or other people's. Since Facebook is not immune to data leaks

and security imperfections, as the latest bug illustrates (which has

apparently been a puncture-hole in its systems since last year), the

fact that it is harvesting and storing your data means there is an

ongoing risk that data could be exposed to others without your

consent. And that's ignoring the primary lack of consent in Facebook

storing your data without asking you in the first place.



Apparently it's ok for your friends to consent to sharing your data on

your behalf. Better choose your friends carefully then. Except it's

not even just your friends — it's likely anyone you have had cause to

correspond with in any capacity, friendship or otherwise. It seems

unlikely Facebook's algorithms are discerning enough to determine

which contacts are friends, were once friends or have always only ever

been passing/fleeting acquaintances and therefore have zero claim to

be custodians of your personal data. Not that your real friends are

likely aware they are acting as guardians of your data either.



Facebook says it uses the data it mines on you from others to power

its friend recommendation feature. Which means the friend suggestion

thumbnails that periodically crop up to help you build out your

Facebook network, based on people its algorithms think you might know.

This feature is helpful to Facebook, allowing it to encourage rapid

growth of its users' networks — by cutting down on the legwork

required to find friends on the service — and therefore fuel overall

user growth of its service. Sure, it's also handy for individual

Facebook users but is it useful enough to justify holding on to a vast

mountain of personal contact data without consent?



The key issues here — beyond the overarching privacy theme — are

transparency and consent. Facebook is very coy about explaining what

it is doing. Do your friends even know they are consenting to your

contact details being stored in Facebook's cloud when they hook

Facebook up to their contacts' books? It's highly unlikely they're

aware that that is what is happening. All they're likely thinking is:

'this feature will help me find more friends'. Facebook is certainly

not going out of its way to explicitly say how its digital matchmaking

service works.



You could argue that the average user won't care or likely understand

a technical explanation. But that does not excuse Facebook treating

your personal data as the property of another person who may or may

not care where that data ends up. It's your data — and you are the one

affected if it's leaked. But Facebook is sidestepping that reality by

being opaque about its processes and failing to acknowledge there are

wider privacy implications to its data-grabbing ways (Packet Storm

goes into one possible unpleasant scenario of the current Facebook

data-harvesting process here).



In its blog post detailing last week's data breach, Facebook skimmed

over the surface of its processes (see quotation below). It focused,

instead, on explaining why it harvests data, rather than making it

clear it is storing users' friends' phone numbers and email addresses'

to do this. Why avoid spelling that out? Because it inevitably sounds

creepy. Because, well, it inevitably is creepy.



When people upload their contact lists or address books to Facebook,

we try to match that data with the contact information of other people

on Facebook in order to generate friend recommendations. For example,

we don't want to recommend that people invite contacts to join

Facebook if those contacts are already on Facebook; instead, we want

to recommend that they invite those contacts to be their friends on

Facebook.



Because of the bug, some of the information used to make friend

recommendations and reduce the number of invitations we send was

inadvertently stored in association with people's contact information

as part of their account on Facebook. As a result, if a person went to

download an archive of their Facebook account through our Download

Your Information (DYI) tool, they may have been provided with

additional email addresses or telephone numbers for their contacts or

people with whom they have some connection. This contact information

was provided by other people on Facebook and was not necessarily

accurate, but was inadvertently included with the contacts of the

person using the DYI tool.



Note Facebook's phrasing: "This contact information was provided by

other people on Facebook". In other words, 'your personal contact info

was shared with us — but not by you'. That's the root issue here, and

Facebook is cloaking it with anodyne language — and burying it five

paragraphs into the post. Transparent? No, not even close.



Of course Facebook is not the only tech giant intent on amassing data

dossiers on as many Internet users as possible. Google has drawn the

attention of European data protection regulators, for example, after

it consolidated more than 60 individual product privacy policies into

one joined up policy — allowing it to join the dots of usage of its

different products to sketch more detailed profiles of those users.

Mountain View's Google+ social layer is also designed to function as a

data harvester, pushing people to tie their usage of multiple Google

products back to a single public profile. As the Guardian's Charles

Arthur has argued, Google+ is not really a social network at all; it's

more like The Matrix.



But despite Google's consolidated privacy policies drawing the

attention of data protection regulators the company has not (yet)

altered its data-knitting course. It remains to be seen whether the

investigation by six European Union member states will force it to

make changes. The possibility of fines is on the table. But when

you're dealing with a company with such massive resources as Google —

and one which pours so much effort into political lobbying — it likely

requires a commensurately joined up, global approach to have any hope

of changing its behaviour. A handful of EU countries aren't going to

be able to turn this juggernaut around.



There is also the argument that the cat is out of the bag. That these

huge data-mining operations are now so mature, extensive and well used

that any kind of regulatory unpicking is futile. Not least because the

quantity of data being gathered on human behaviour is only going to

grow — likely becoming even more personal and intimate, with wearable

devices enabling the harvesting of physical data-points too. And yet

that actually sounds like a lot more weight for the argument that

these huge data-harvesting operations really need proper scrutiny

stat.



It has to be said that data protection regulators have been extremely

flat-footed in their response to the implications of systematic

consolidation and cross-referencing of personal data. The lack of

transparency about how these algorithms work has certainly helped the

companies that created them to grow their user-data mountains in

carefully crafted shade.



But a little more light is now being directed onto those darkened

places, and onto the control-minded organisations (such as the NSA)

inevitably attracted by the scale of the data-mining operations going

on behind some of the shiniest consumer facades in tech town. So, even

if we as personal Internet-using individuals can't now hope to claim

absolute ownership of all our data online, it's worth asking what

other kind of data-fuelled Frankensteins are lurking in the darkness —

besides Facebook's zombie army of shadow profiles.

For More Info vist Here : http://techcrunch.com/

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