Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Facebook admits to tracking cookie, says it was a "mistake." Really?

Facebook has admitted that it has been watching the web pages its members visit – even when they have logged out.

In its latest privacy blunder, the social networking site was forced to confirm that it has been constantly tracking its 750million users, even when they are using other sites.

The social networking giant says the huge privacy breach was simply a mistake - that software automatically downloaded to users' computers when they logged in to Facebook 'inadvertently' sent information to the company, whether or not they were logged in at the time.

Most would assume that Facebook stops monitoring them after they leave its site, but technology bloggers discovered this was not the case.

In fact, data has been regularly sent back to the social network’s servers – data that could be worth billions when creating 'targeted' advertising based on the sites users visit. Full story...

Don't miss:
  1. Blogger accuses Facebook of cookie abuse... 
  2. Details of 100m Facebook users leaked and published...
  3. Facebook facial recognition technology sparks renewed privacy concerns...
  4. How Google and Facebook manipulate and determine your searches...
  5. Facebook selling your data to advertisers...
  6. Be very, very cautious about what you say on Facebook...
  7. "Facebook is the most dangerous assault weapon in the world..."
  8. Privacy? What privacy? Teacher loses job because of Facebook photo... 

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