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  • Breaking News

    What Facebook knows about you

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    If the advertisements on your Facebook newsfeed appear remarkably relevant, it's because the social network giant knows you very well. Facebook amassed an estimated $39.9 billion in ad revenue in 2017 by mining its vast troves of data on 2.2 billion users and then selling targeted information to advertisers that they use to sell you products and services based on your personal tastes.
    There are also more sinister ways companies use your information. Researcher Michal Kosinski devised a model that analysed a user's Facebook "likes" to predict information such as ethnicity, sexual orientation, and political beliefs to both create and locate personal psychological profiles.  
    A similar strategy of data analysis may have helped Donald Trump reach the White House.
    Cambridge Analytica harvested data from an estimated 87 million Facebook users and used the information to send them targeted campaign ads that appealed to their personal needs and desires. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was called to testify before Congress about the breach.
    Wikileaks founder Julian Assange called Facebook "the most appalling spying machine that has ever been invented," in an interview with Russian news site RT.
    "Here we have the world's most comprehensive database about people, their relationships, their names, their addresses, their locations and the communications with each other, their relatives, all sitting within the United States, all accessible to U.S. intelligence," claimed Assange.
    "Every time you go to a party and take a picture and post that picture to Facebook, you're being a rat," he added at a book launch in 2014.
    But even his organisation can't resist joining the mischief. Wikileaks has its own Facebook page with more than 3.5 million followers.
    Facebook collects a disturbingly detailed dataset of its users and it hasn't always been transparent about exactly how it's used.

    1. Facebook unveils 'Clear History' tool

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    The backlash over the Cambridge Analytica data leak scandal has been the biggest threat to Facebook's future since the company was founded.
    The #deletefacebook movement has thus far failed to put a dent in revenues, but the social network has already launched new tools and policies to limit the damage.
    At Facebook's annual F8 developer conference, CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced plans to build a new tool called "Clear History" that he said would make it easier for users to control and clear their browsing history.
    "This feature will enable you to see the websites and apps that send us information when you use them, delete this information from your account, and turn off our ability to store it associated with your account going forward," Facebook's VP and Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan explained in a statement.
    Egan added that the tool would take a few months to build and that Facebook planned to take more steps to improve data protection.

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