European Internet Users Urged To Protect Themselves Against Facebook Tracking 147
An anonymous reader writes: Belgium's Privacy Protection Commission says that Facebook tramples on European privacy laws by tracking people online without their consent and dodges questions from national regulators. They have issued a set of recommendations for both Facebook, website owners and end users. Net-Security reports: "The recommendations are based on the results of an extensive analysis of Facebook's revised policies and terms (rolled out on January 30, 2015) conducted by the inter-university research center EMSOC/SPION, which concluded that the company is acting in violation of European law. According to them Facebook places too much burden on its users to protect their privacy, and then doesn't offer simple tools and settings to do so, and sets up some problematic default settings. They also don't provide adequate information for users to make informed choices."
Facebook isn't free (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Facebook isn't free (Score:5, Informative)
Even if you don't sign up or consent they collect data on you. Those like "like" buttons on every page are spying on you, tracking you.
Install uBlock and Privacy Badger to opt out.
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Perhaps Privacy Badger is great but there are a few issues : knowing the extension du jour, possible browser slowdown (well, I think Mozilla Lightbeam did it), danger of launching an unprotected secondary browser or profile.
You can do something like this at the hosts file : perhaps this one has unnecessary duplicate entries but it works (in particular "connect", "login" and cdn" are blocked out)
127.0.0.1 www.facebook.com
127.0.0.1 facebook.com
127.0.0.1 static.ak.fbcdn.net
127.0.0.1 www.static.ak.fbcdn.net
127.
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If you think you're even close to enumerating the facebook DNS zone(s) there...well nevermind. I'm selling bridges, interested?
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I should have left facebook.[your country tld] and www.facebook.[your country tld] in there and sure, all the other ones are missing, then there's stuff I don't know about. It's not that easy to find a list.
I would block the IP ranges as they're given in a post here, but investigating about how to do it on a linux desktop is boring.
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Oh well.
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A bit better:
ssh your-router-ip
iptables -F FB /`
iptables -X FB
iptables -N FB
for ip in `whois -h whois.radb.net '!gAS32934' | grep
do
iptables -A FB -o eth0 -d $ip -j REJECT
done
iptables -I FORWARD -o eth0 -j FB
Here's the facebook part of my /etc/hosts (Score:3)
Unhelpful people will point out that such a list isn't and can't be perfectly complete. That's true, but so what, this list blocks a ton of tracking. If I'm missing important domains, please tell me which ones. I've merged in the domains from Blaskowicz's list which weren't already in mine. (I've also heard conflicting opinions on using 127.0.0.1 vs 0.0.0.0. I don't know which is better but I do know the difference is insignificant.)
0.0.0.0 apps.facebook.com
0.0.0.0 connect.facebook.net
0.0.0.0 de-de.fac
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The advantage of using Privacy Badger is that it doesn't rely on a constantly maintained list. It looks at how domains are being used, if they are tracking you by pulling the same cookies on different sites, and if they offer anything useful. It then automatically blocks useless/invasive ones, all without any effort on your part.
If you are too lazy to maintain a list or want your non technical friends and relatives to be safe, it's a good solution. Use both, they complement each other.
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I use both, and AdblockPlus.
What I like about Privacy Badger is that it comes from EFF and it's free software (gplv3).
On the other hand, I don't know how good their algorithm is or how it distinguishes between good and bad content providers. For example, one massive privacy invasion is Google web services, but these are legitimately used by many websites, for images or javascript or fonts.
I don't know how Privacy Badger views this type of service. They could have a hand-written rule for Google, but what a
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Those like "like" buttons on every page are spying on you
That's nonsense; they're not spying at all. In fact, they do nothing. It's you that explicitly requested that button from Facebook, which merely keeps track of what you (or your browser) explicitly sent them.
It's a total miracle that we're all hating Facebook while we should be hating our browser manufacturers for failing to properly protect us from sending shit all over the place. Even MS Outlook does a better job when it asks me whether I really want to load images from some server. Browsers should do the
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Those like "like" buttons on every page are spying on you
That's nonsense; they're not spying at all. In fact, they do nothing.
Amazing how people who are completely wrong can speak with such authority.
New plug in (Score:3)
I use the "strangers on a train" plug in. It exchanges all your facebook cookies every 5 minutes with another random person. It doesn't hurt your facebook login itself since you still need your password for that. It just scrambles your identity when you press like. If everyone used this then the "likes" would still add up to being meaningful but the user profiles would be completely homogenized and have no tracking value.
Re:Facebook isn't free (Score:4, Informative)
If you'd read TFA you'd notice that Facebook tracks the activity of non-users. Pages with Facebook widgets on them create a cookie with a UUID that allows them to follow your activity to all other pages that have those widges.
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Apparently you havent yet figured out how to delete cookies. Time to read your browsers help page perhaps.
Re:Facebook isn't free (Score:4, Informative)
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They're not stealing anything. Cookies always have been a tracking method so you can't complain when someone uses them to track you. Don't want to be tracked? Delete them.
I'm really beginning to believe there should be the equivalent of a drivers license for using the internet. That way we'd keep all the whining idiots away from it.
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They are accused of tracking people who never signed up to Facebook and who never agreed to be tracked through the use of the like buttons. They don't need nor use cookies to track you. With a script they can reveal a lot of information of your browser, add ons, ip, operating system, last visited page, etc... That information is almost like DNA and can identify you while you browse the internet. This is how Facebook tracks you without ever needing to place a cookie on your computer. They create a shadow pro
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Apparently you havent yet figured out how to delete cookies. Time to read your browsers help page perhaps.
So much more than deleting cookies, muchacho. Better be blocking scripts as well.
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The problem here is that they track you even if you have *not* signed that contract (i.e. don't have an account).
Re:Facebook isn't free (Score:4, Informative)
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Contractual clauses which violate US law are null and void in that country as well.
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Yes, but non-US citizens have no legal. So under US law, US entities always beat non-US entities.
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That's completely orthogonal to my point. But thanks for playing.
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Your data is a form of payment and you submit to authorizing facebook to use it when you sign up. Why shouldn't Europeans abide by the contract they willfully sign? Facebook is not a public utility, you are not forced to consume it.
Yes, what you write is correct, BUT:
Facebook's tracking of users who do not own a Facebook account [...] the company tracks users who are logged-out from Facebook through the social plug-ins ("Like" and "Share" buttons), tracks opted-out Facebook users with a cookie for advertising purposes, tracks users who are not Facebook users but who have visited Facebook's pages, and so on.
I don't own (never did) a Facebook account, but (and this is a fact) Facebook knows my name (with my foto connected to my name), people i know, other social/political/etc info about me.
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Re:Facebook isn't free (Score:5, Insightful)
Because even if they were just tracking data of users who sign up, contrary to popular myth, peddled mostly by people who think they know the law but apparently don't, contracts are not magical legal instruments that overrule everything ever.
In just about every jurisdiction in the world contracts have limits. They cannot overrule statutory rights, you cannot sign away your life in a contract, you cannot sign away your legal responsibility for a crime onto someone else poor and desperate enough to be willing to take it for money.
Hence, it doesn't matter what is in a contract, if that contract doesn't adhere to the laws of the country in which the agreement is made then either the whole or that portion of the contract are meaningless and irrelevant.
Facebook doesn't get to rewrite the law, so rather than blaming users for agreeing to a section of a contract that has no legal merit in the first place, you should be asking, "Why can't Facebook adhere to the laws of the countries in which it chooses to operate if it wishes to operate there?". That's the real question- you see, your question is meaningless; Europeans ARE abiding by the contract they wilfully sign because it's a meaningless contract with large portions that hold no legal merit in the first place. It's not their fault Facebook wrote a contract that tries to claim rights that it has no legal standing to claim - that's Facebook's fault, they should've drafted a contract that's wholly enforceable within the confines of the law.
Most companies manage, but it seems a number of tech companies really struggle with it, because profit.
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And why Should Facebook consider it a contract for life and have no facility for deleting an acount?
Facebook is a honeypot (Score:3, Interesting)
The only way to win is not to play.
K-line their links and widgets in your browsers. Don't feed the beast.
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These are both good approaches. They're the first 2 on Schneier's list of the 4 ways to "protect yourself from digital surveillance". [huffingtonpost.com]
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No, I have an account with facebook. The only problem is that it's a dog. None of my personal information is there. Only a picture of my dog, and a few stories about my dog. So all the data collected by the account, browsing history, tracking, etc, is all well and good. How the plan to market this however... how old am I? Where do I work? Why do I have a penchant for liking doggy things? Heck, what sex am I? Sure they can probably extrapolate that through my history. But at the end of the day if they want t
The free society rub (Score:1)
This is why "free" is never "free". The internet is mostly based on private enterprise supporting its own sites or advertisement providing the funding. Facebook is no different and relies heavily on finding ways to support all those "free" users. Its interesting, because I wonder how popular these sites like Facebook would be if the end user had to pay for everything in return for no ads, no unwanted loss of privacy? But everyone should know that when you visit a web site you may be providing more informati
Lost link to report found, and "site owners" (Score:4, Informative)
The link to the actual report in TFA is broken, as it was on the Belgian commission's own site until a few moments ago. So here it is:
http://www.privacycommission.b... [privacycommission.be]
The recommendations for site owners is to enhance the cookie opt-in banner that you already see on European sites. A cookie for cookies! It's buried deep in the heavily enumerated document, so I'll quote it in full:
The European Union's health (Score:1)
I'm glad to see the EU handle Facebook as the disease that it is.
Politics fails to protect the people (Score:1)
Politicians are practically falling over themselves while rushing to give the people's privacy to Facebook, Google, etc. Everything else is just sweet-talk to placate the critics. Telling people to protect themselves is the height of insolence. Everybody wants to know what everybody else is doing, who they're talking to, and they make the laws to all but prevent privacy. You can't even get a SIM card without "papers please" in many European countries. They compel ISPs to record all sorts of metadata, even i
/etc/hosts file paranoia (Score:5, Informative)
127.0.0.1 www.facebook.com facebook.com
127.0.0.1 www.static.ak.fbcdn.net static.ak.fbcdn.net
127.0.0.1 www.login.facebook.com login.facebook.com
127.0.0.1 www.fbcdn.net fbcdn.net
127.0.0.1 www.fbcdn.com fbcdn.com
127.0.0.1 www.static.ak.connect.facebook.com static.ak.connect.facebook.com
127.0.0.1 www.static.ak.facebook.com static.ak.facebook.com
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Unfortunately no, you can't use wildcards in hosts files. You can however set up your own DNS resolver to block entire domains with all their subdomains. It's really quite easy, even on your Windows desktop system, and you get DNSSEC verification on top: Unbound [unbound.net]. If you use an OpenWRT router, you can install Unbound there and block domains for all your devices in one go.
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Many people are already running a router 24/7 so electricity usage is not a problem
All operating systems cache DNS lookups. And since the facebook ones are on many many web pages they do tend to be cached so this is not slow.
DNS lookups are quite infrequent when compared to the amount of data transferred so "slow" is probably not going to be noticeable.
Running your own DNS server (locally on your machine) or on your router/modem gives a lot of flexibility.
DNS servers do not take up much in the way of ram or
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You have to love APK. Somehow he missed the point. Somewhere in 1980 or so? I could be wrong. Perhaps it was earlier.
Modifying the hosts file is useful but it is not a solution to all issues. Faster, Stronger, more secure! Well no, not really.
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That is the APK we all know and love.
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I think its better to use NoScript and just block the domains
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If you use 127.0.0.1 your web browser will try to connect to localhost. If you run a web server, this will result in a 404 and weird content on your pages. If you don't run a web server, this will result in a delay while the web browser unsuccessfully attempts to connect.
Instead, you should use 0.0.0.0 which is a null route that fails immediately.
No.
No local web server results in rejection by the OS, which is very fast.
Some web SITES on the other hand, use things like load-time include content that mucks up pages. But in general using the localhost IP is very fast.
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I'm European and I don't care. EU is hypocritical (Score:3)
I believe most companies nowadays are using opt-out, "bad user default settings" schemes and most of them simply won't move away from it, well, because it just works so well with their ad-based and big data business model. And you know what? I'm fine with that, it's so much better than a subscription. With that said, there There are only 2 reasons why people deserve the privacy violations they are put through:
So, to be totally honest, I know the harm I'm put through while using Facebook, I know ways to circumvent most of it, and the harm I can't avoid is my own damn fault for posting socially awkward information/comment/photo of myself.
The bottom line is that Facebook-user relations aren't much different from a state-citizen one: when I go about my life in my country of "choice" (i.e. where I happened to be born or end up), I am also supposed to have some kind of omniscience of all types of law, such as fiscal (taxes), penal (crimes), environmental, etc, and even all my own damn rights. Either that or to have the income to hire "omniscient entities" in each of those fields. Only then I become a "perfect citizen" in the eyes of the state, as I abide to every form of policy my country, the EU, and the F'ing UN imposed on me. So the EU doesn't like Facebook for pretty much acting the way they do. That is a load of bull.
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The problem is that FB also tracks non-fb-users. You can't opt-out from this.
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Re:I'm European and I don't care. EU is hypocritic (Score:5, Insightful)
Tracking is not just web 3.0, it's society/globalization 101. One learns to live with it.
Or, like civilised people, we decide that some behaviour is potentially damaging and/or socially unacceptable, we make it illegal, and we punish those who continue to do it.
Also, your continued analogy between what governments do and what private businesses do is silly. Technology is not inherently evil. Storing data about someone is not inherently evil. How you use that technology and what you use that data for may be evil, or may not.
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Re:I'm European and I don't care. EU is hypocritic (Score:5, Insightful)
I do not disagree with you in your last 3 sentences. Other than that, I accept the fact that my social condition (that of a working, middle-class citizen, i.e. one vote) simply does not allow me to have that influence in communitary law-making.
As a 25 year old PhD student, together with a bunch of like-minded people that had no political clout or connections (many of which were students or PhD students), I managed to help block the EU software patents directive back in 2009. This directive had the full support of the European Commission, and initially also of the majority of the largest groups in the European Parliament (the Christian Democrats and the Socialists). Big IT companies (IBM, Microsoft, Nokia, ...) spent over 4 million euro on lobbying. And yet in the end (after 7 years of procedure) they all decided to go for cancelling the directive rather than risking it might get amended do something we may like and they might not.
For me, it started in a very silly way: I sent a mail [ffii.org] to all Belgian MEPs, explaining them my view on the directive and on software patents. A week later, I got a call from an assistant of a number of MEPs telling me it was the first mail on the topic that made any sense to her, and asking me (a random student that just mailed them) how they should vote on the report that was being tabled the next week. I kind of panicked, told her I'd get back to her, looked on the Internet who could help me with that, ended up at the FFII [ffii.org] and the rest is history.
Seriously, politicians and their aides are also also just people, and if you say something that makes sense, many of them will pay attention. There are of course always those who have made up their mind and won't care, but in my experience of 5 years of talking with them, I did not come to the conclusion that it's the majority of them. Not even close. Especially at the European level, where they are often happy that finally someone from the home country actually cares about what they're doing (as long as you're not sending template mails).
And yes, in the end it did cost lot of effort. But it is patently (hah!) false that there is nothing you can do influence or achieve at the EU level.
Democracy allows me this vote every now and then
That is just one part of democracy. It's an important one, but still just a part. A functional democracy requires way more effort than just voting every couple of years. And you can do it just as well as anyone else.
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It's very nice to hear the system worked for you. But you have to accept that the whole environment lined up for a favorable conclusion. At quick glance I identify: you were not alone, as you ganged up a scientific group with relevant background on the matter at hand (even if students); you admittedly wasted a lot of effort for a single measure in your professional area; you are also Belgium-based, which does have an influence, be it by language barriers, or the simple fact that if a member of EU counsel ne
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It's very nice to hear the system worked for you.
There is no external "system" system entity that works or does not work for us. We are all part of what I what would rather call "democratic society". It's true that there are entities with lots of money and influence, but "regular people" tend to severely underestimate their ability to achieve anything. We won for a large part because we were not cynical enough to "know" that we could not win anyway.
But you have to accept that the whole environment lined up for a favorable conclusion. At quick glance I identify: you were not alone, as you ganged up a scientific group with relevant background on the matter at hand (even if students);
You are never alone. Of course you have to find like-minded people. But as my simple email demonstrates, eve
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I have the simple option of just not using facebook and get on with my life without it.
No, you don't. That's the point. These organisations built around tracking and data mining are collecting data about you from sources you can't control. Notably, they systematically try to collect information about individuals via for example each individual's friends, without any consent or potentially even knowledge of the data subject.
A feature as simple as having a mobile app that uploads the phonebook to FB gives them a name and number and a link from that shadow account to the phone's owner. All it ta
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The trouble with this argument is that even if you are the most well-informed and capable geek on Earth, many of your friends and family won't be. The only way to keep control by your argument is effectively to completely cut yourself off from normal society and live as a hermit.
There is a reason we have laws (and, often, constitutions) protecting basic human rights and freedoms. We also have laws about consumer rights, and data protection, and regulation of critical industries, and fair contract terms. The
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Other people can post photos of you and tag you in them. You can't easily stop them doing it... Their phone might even do it automatically. Even if you avoid doing anything embarrassing in public it's easy for photos to be taken out of context.
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Then please tell me how i can preemt pictures of me getting tagged on facebook as a non facebook user.
You do a google instead of using this comment section. If you don't have an account, it only links to a name, which is an ambiguous thing. If it uniquely links to your identity by usage of, e.g. a social security number, you can sue. But stop thinking you can preempt people from being people discriminating the platform. You can't prevent your children being bullied - you can only switch their school. Example below:
https://www.facebook.com/help/community/question/?id=10152050760878003
Also please note that the privacy laws in the EU do not recognize what you call "public domain," much less if the pictures were taken in a non-public place an uploaded by a facebook member.
If the place happens to
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It's not the EU who is trying to stop Facebook but a Belgian Privacy Protection Commission. This commission is founded in popular demand to protect the privacy of Belgian citizens and to be a service point were citizens can report privacy issues. There were many complains about this issue with Facebook and the commission tries to defend the rights of those people. They have been successful to stop privacy invading ideas of the Belgian or local governments in the past (like the removal of public camera's) an
Fucking Communists (Score:1, Funny)
Fuck those communists in Europe. Facebook is America and America is Freedom. It is their patriotic duty to allow themselves to be monitored and everyone owes a debt of patriotism to America, whether they're American or not!
Use their tracking agasint them (Score:3)
Just fill out false information, post pictures that are not you, tag things incorrectly, feed the bots dust til they choke.
If you think about it's possible to loop their own ads back to them...just help spread the advertisement.
They agreed to these conditions when they accept me as a user.
Re:Use their tracking against them (Score:2)
"Just fill out false information, post pictures that are not you, tag things incorrectly, feed the bots dust til they choke."
This "camouflage" or "false positive" technique is way underutilized with cookie tracking and searches tracking.
But it's far more difficult with facial recognition. If you are using someone else's face, it gets tricky, and is also probably fairly easy to sort out electronically.
I've thought about using Photoshopping to slightly change the distance between my eyes, shrink or ex
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I am not too sure about the "feed false data" approach. What if the false data happens to provide a much more negative image of you than your real data?
At least with your real information you can kind of figure out how you are being cataloged by the spying, but what picture does false data paint? Could it potentially label you as a possible criminal/deviant/etc because of some unthinkable combination of false data? What if you stumble upon a combination that relates you to some hate group by accident?
I thin