Facebook Bug Has Camera Activated While People Are Using the App (cnet.com) 92
When you're scrolling through Facebook's app, the social network could be watching you back, in more ways than just your data, concerned users have found. Multiple people have found and reported that their iPhone cameras were turned on in the background while looking at their feed. From a report: The issue came to light with several posts on Twitter, showing that their cameras were activated behind Facebook's app as they were watching videos or looking at photos on the social network. After clicking on the video to full screen, returning it back to normal would create a bug where Facebook's mobile layout was slightly shifted to the right. With the open space on the left, you could now see the phone's camera activated in the background. This was documented in multiple cases, with the earliest incident on November 2.
Features and bugs (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Features and bugs (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Features and bugs (Score:5, Informative)
I believe it is both in this scenario. The "bug" refers to the display glitch (bug) that allowed users to see the camera running in the background (feature).
Yep. The headline is wrong, it should read:
"Software glitch reveals that Facebook has been activating your camera in the background without your knowledge"
(since Glub knows when...)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: Features and bugs (Score:1)
The bug is in iOS security and permissions
Re: Features and bugs (Score:1)
And iOS app approval process. Why is apple allowing this
Re: (Score:1)
And iOS app approval process. Why is apple allowing this
I assume because you need the camera and mic to use the app for calls and video chats on Facebook. Obviously they took advantage of that and used it whenever they felt like spying on you.
Re: Features and bugs (Score:2)
Audio/video calls are handled via the FB Messenger app. The FB app does want access so you can post pics and videos straight from the app.
I remember seeing the offset screen thing a couple of times, about a week ago. Didnâ(TM)t pick up on the camera angle. But not for the past three days. Interestingly, the FB app was updated 3 days ago.
Re: (Score:2)
Imagine if Facebook became "not available" on iOS overnight, and Safari started having mysterious rendering bugs on facebook.com. Imagine if Facebook were to recommend using a secure, supported platform like Android or Windows. That might not be good for Apple.
That's why Apple allows it, and that's why the "security" in iOS is worth zero point zero more than Android.
Re: (Score:1)
Why is Apple doing this?
Becasue Apple cares about your security.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
They have it now. It's called a finger. Or opaque tape if you want permanence... :-)
I accidentally activate that switch all the time when I use the camera
Re: (Score:3)
Totally a feature, not a bug.
Psst. You're the product, not the customer.
Facebook doesn't deserve the benefit of doubt (Score:4, Insightful)
So calling this a bug is a bit optimistic.
On the other hand, they have only so much disk space in which to store video; if this is not an accident we could tell if they just keep a frame every second or three.
Re:Facebook doesn't deserve the benefit of doubt (Score:5, Insightful)
Doesn't matter. If they've recorded a single underage person naked then they ought to be in deep shit because of this.
As in Jail-time shit, the sort of shit you or I would be in if we installed spyware on a phone to record people.
No doubt Zuck will grease a few palms and get away with it though.
Re: (Score:3)
How are you disagreeing with me?? As for the point you make above ... it might take a forensic audit of their systems to distinguish between all the underage people putting their naked pictures and video on Facebook and Facebook doing that deliberately or accidentally, unless they've got some serious AI disposing of the former as soon as it's uploaded.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Doesn't matter. If they've recorded a single underage person naked then they ought to be in deep shit because of this.
Why underage? Why not any age person? Same invasion of privacy.
Re:Facebook doesn't deserve the benefit of doubt (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Facebook doesn't deserve the benefit of doubt (Score:2)
We would need someone who had the app installed on iOS last week. without having given it camera permissions, to report their experience.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
Calling it a bug would seem insulting to one's intelligence, given Zuckerberg's and Facebook's status as a serial privacy offender. So, what could this be?
No. It would simply be calling out tinfoil hat conspiracies for what they are. Facebook as a software package through it's core functionality needs camera access. With absolutely zero evidence of battery drain, network bandwidth drain, capacity being used up, or anything else that goes along with any kind of video analysis, calling this anything more than yet another daft conspiracy theory is insulting to people's intelligence.
The bug is in the software. The software is available to use. Do the analysis (it
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Facebook doesn't deserve the benefit of doubt (Score:2)
Nazi bootlicker rides to the defense of Faceboot's ubiquitous spying! No one at all is surprised.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: Facebook doesn't deserve the benefit of doubt (Score:2)
If the Facebook app was able to gain root access to your device, you would be still blaming Facebook?
Re: (Score:2)
If I gain 'root access' to a bank vault, would you blame me? (Hint: it wouldn't be the bank or the vault manufacturer going to jail).
NBD (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm guessing the FB app goes ahead and readies the camera so you can quickly swipe and take a photo and avoid camera startup lag.
Plenty of reasons to hate them, but this is a stretch.
Re:NBD (Score:5, Insightful)
Battery life be damned?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: NBD (Score:1)
Moral of the story:
If you think your phone is old and slow, try uninstalling some apps.
Re: (Score:1)
Moral of the story:
If you think your phone is old and slow, try uninstalling some apps.
If you think at all, you should have already uninstalled Facebook.
Re: (Score:1)
If you think at all, you should have already uninstalled Facebook.
Some people cut themselves, other people check Facebook every 20 minutes. It's not an issue of intelligence, but an issue of psychological self-harm.
Re:NBD (Score:4, Interesting)
Because that's the behaviour that is most important!
Should probably ready my mic, scanner, and security cameras just in case. For the children.
-- I don't have FB.
And I thought the headline was gullible and delude (Score:2)
Turns out there is always one even more gullible blackeyer out there.
You do realize you're basically up to "time cube" conspiracy theory and "crazy guy on the street corner" level by now, right?
No, having the opposite polarity doesn't make you any closer to realistic on the sanity scale.
Re: (Score:2)
More than likely it was a bug. There's no reason to have instant available camera without lag on a bloated piece of junk like Facebook.
I like to remind you this is an app which runs in the hundreds of megabytes. It's not fast. It mostly doesn't try to be fast. The idea that it is actually bug free is laughable.
Re: (Score:2)
No, the everpresent covert surveillance still qualifies as a reason to hate them. In fact, it is the reason to hate them.
The only stretch here is the acrobatic contortion you see from the apologists. Gotta put bread on the table somehow, I guess. But the shady companies I worked for, only fucked over other shady companies, not innocent people. Why can't you do that instead?
Why in the hell... (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you volunteer to watch commercials too?
If you've already bought into the willful ... (Score:3)
...suspension of mistrust, people usually go all the way. Full Amazon spying device in every room, GoogleFacebookAmazonMicrosoftApple apps, giving your phone number to every data broker who asks, ...
It's like a straight guy willing to "try it out once", and going straight to a cruising club's dark room on "piss and fisting night". ;) (Yes, that actually is a thing. I don't judge. I run.)
Once they got out again, they will be the most militant criticisers of it though.
Better app? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
It's what finally got me to overcome my laziness and root my phone - so I could disable the
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, the app is there, but if it isn't activated, and no account login entered, I think it's fairly benign. Any evidence that just the presence of the app is a problem?
(I'm no fan of FB, don't have it on any of my mobile devices for these very reasons, but hopefully just the app without ever logging in would be harmless..but that might be too hopeful.)
Re: (Score:2)
Odds that your carrier provides facebook with a unique identifier for your device; and FB still gets all of your browsing data anyways?
That's the truly pernicious thing about these advertising networks (google/fb) embedded like ticks over the entire internet -- all it takes is one hit to a given page with the right data points exposed and your anonymity is gone (retroactively)
No matter how zealously you try to avoid them, eventually you'll slip up -- even on a single site; and the constellation of data poin
Re: (Score:2)
Any evidence that just the presence of the app is a problem?
Given https://www.theverge.com/2019/... [theverge.com] you can fucking bet I don't trust the Facebook app itself.
Re:Why in the hell... (Score:5, Informative)
...would you install the FB app on your phone?
While I agree with your sentiment, there is a reason most people do it. Facebook purposely cripples their mobile website to force you to use the app.
Someone sent you a message. Want to read it? You have to install the app.
Do you manage a business account? If you want to access it, you need to install the app.
I get around this by having my browser request the desktop site, but most people don't know this hack. However, my wife told my the desktop site hack doesn't work on business accounts.
Re: (Score:2)
I can't speak to the issue of business accounts, but I use a third party app (Metal) to view Facebook. It lets you read your messages. I guess there are some others, but this is the one I settled on.
Re: (Score:2)
As an alternative to switching to desktop mode, you can still reply to messages by visiting the mobile basic [facebook.com] site.
Re: (Score:2)
As an alternative to switching to desktop mode, you can still reply to messages by visiting the mobile basic [facebook.com] site.
Great info! It loads fast too!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Do you volunteer to watch commercials too?
Yes I do. I openly volunteer to have commercials played on my TV as a natural side effect of what I actually want to do: watch a certain show.
Great analogy though. Why would someone install Facebook on their phone? Well that's likely a natural side effect of wanting to see someone else's posts, or talking to someone via Messenger, or (god forbid) maybe they are one of those weirdos who live stream.
Bug? Accident? Sure it was! (Score:5, Insightful)
Facebook can't be trusted to secure the catch on a rabbit hutch. Imagine Facebook able to tie your facial expression to each ad and post you look at, that would be an absolute goldmine of useful information to them. Mistake, sure it was.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah imagine that. Imagine how warm all those phones must be doing facial expression analysis on video streams. Imagine all that data being used sending stuff to the borg.
I mean we'll have to continue imagining it because none of this scenario actually appears to have any evidence behind it but sure imagine away!
Re: (Score:1)
How (Score:2)
I call bullshit. How do you *accidentally* activate the camera?
Re: (Score:2)
If you have functionality that uses the camera, you could fail to turn it off after, or you could turn it on in preparation for that feature to be used. I can see how it might happen. Having said that, I dropped FB over a decade ago after trying it for a couple months.
The more we learn about Facebook... (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
TIL Facebook has access to the camera. ... Oh wait, no that was a feature it has had for close to 10 years now.
Which camera? (Score:2)
Was this the camera on the back, or the front? Or both? Only one of them is watching you.
I suppose to run a facial recognition scan and ensure it's the right user. The rear camera seems less useful. Another question: is the microphone on as well? That can identify any voices in the vicinity.
Re: (Score:3)
Only one of them is watching you.
Unless you are getting some 'me time' encouragement from what is on your phone at the time...
"Bug"... riiight. (Score:2)
How gullible and black-eyed some people are. Like mirror images of conspiracy theorists.
The real bug (Score:4, Insightful)
orly (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Just create an empty, "ghost" account for those times when you need to get in touch with some company that only have social tool presence
Hell no. Write to them. Costs you a stamp and an envelope but costs them a bucket load more to receive, scan, process and post a reply.
You can mention in the letter that you would have emailed them but they didn't offer that option.
Not that I ever need to do this. I can't access goods and services of social-media-only companies in the first place.
Bug - Not (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
They are sleazy bastard, no doubt. But *just because you don't like something doesn't make it 'illegal'*. They are a private company with whom you signed a contract and agreed to terms. At most you have a civil case for breach of contract. You would lose, but there is not criminal penalty for doing something you don't like.
Re: Bug - Not (Score:2)
Let's say somewhere in the dense, inscrutable leonine shrinkwap "contract" Faceboot calls "Terms of Service" and claims I "agreed" to, it says they can break into my house and steal my silverware. Think that's gonna stand up in court? It would take a _lot_ of suitcases full of cash in a very dark parking lot to make that one fly.
Same thing here. Obviously criminal behavior, whether or not someone "agreed" to it hidden deep in a take-it-or-leave-it contact that no one reads.
Never use Facebook apps! (Score:2)
This, and the plethora of other things that Facebook apps do, is why I never ever install any app that Facebook own (sand disable any that come preinstalled -- grrr). This includes WhatsApp. As a company, Facebook has 0 trust. And nobody should every have any more trust for this company, no matter what they say or do or promise, because they will always do the wrong thing. Always.
If you really really must use Facebook, use it in an incognito tab on your browser only.
I know Facebook has denied this, but... (Score:1)
Facebook has said multiple times that it doesn't use the camera to spy on it's users, but here's the thing...
I work at a tech company, and we had a facebook engineer come in to our office and talk about how they do user experience testing at facebook, and one of the was was with the front camera. The engineer was vague, and didn't really expand on if this was internal testing or external, but he was super open and nonchalant about this.
About year later, when facebook was accused of using the front facing ca
The real reason (Score:1)
(repost) I know Facebook has denied this, but... (Score:1)
(I had to repost this because it got immediately down modded into oblivion for some reason)
Facebook has said multiple times that it doesn't use the camera to spy on it's users, but here's the thing...
I work at a tech company, and we had a facebook engineer come in to our office and talk about how they do user experience testing at facebook, and one of the was was with the front camera. The engineer was vague, and didn't really expand on if this was internal testing or external, but he was super open and non
Re: (Score:2)
(I had to repost this because it got immediately down modded into oblivion for some reason)
No you didn't. [slashdot.org] As of right now there's no mod activity on that post. AC always go to a score of 0.
Zuckerberg mode (Score:2)
The code monkey that let the cat out of the bag has been sent to the dog house.
Failbook strikes again. (Score:1)
This must be what Nietzsche meant (Score:2)
"And if you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss also gazes into you."
--MM
"Bug" (Score:2)
Facebook also has a bridge they'd like to sell you...
App permissions (Score:2)
So people didn't grant camera access permissions and the app can access the camera?
When using social media (Score:1)
Not using a cam? No need for the mic? Unplug the webcam.
Want to use a mic and cam again? Plug the webcam back in.
Nothing for the ad company, good censor, US gov, US mil, UK mil, MI6, GCHQ, the gov of New Zealand to get to collect on due to a PRISM like "bug".
Emotion detection while scrolling through newsfeed (Score:1)