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Facebook’s Defense for Sucking Up Your Call and Text Data Entirely Misses the Point

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A number of Facebook users discovered over the past few days that the social media company had collected a creepy level of information about their calls and texts. Many users claimed they never gave Facebook permission to gather this information. However, in response to the uproar, Facebook says the “feature” is opt-in only. Basically, the company’s saying it’s your own fault if you don’t like it.
A number of Facebook users discovered over the past few days that the social media company had collected a creepy level of information about their calls and texts. Many users claimed they never gave Facebook permission to gather this information. However, in response to the uproar, Facebook says the “feature” is opt-in only. Basically, the company’s saying it’s your own fault if you don’t like it.
To understand what Facebook is defending requires a lot of explanation—and that’s the heart of the problem.
In the last week, Facebook has been under fire as the public discovered how reckless the company has been with their data. Watchdogs have sounded this alarm for years, but Facebook has always made a tweak here or there when it gets called out—as if its previous sins would be automatically absolved.
But as the company faces growing scrutiny over its data practices, a number of users began digging around in their archives. Spurred by a tweet from developer Dylan McKay, social media users complained this weekend that Facebook had records of their contacts, as well as call and text metadata. Facebook has let users export their data since 2010.
Ars Technica spoke with numerous users who felt blindsided, and the publication’s staff did their own tests, finding SMS data and contacts data from an Android device they used in 2015 and 2106. From the report:
To put all of that into plain English, Google’s Android OS has its own privacy issues, and coupled with Facebook’s apps, it could’ve made it possible for Facebook users to opt-into the company’s surveillance program without realizing it.
Facebook responded on Sunday with a “Fact Check” blog post claiming that any assertion that “Facebook has been logging people’s call and SMS (text) history without their permission” is false. As the unsigned blog reads, in part:
It’s true that Facebook, as far as we know, has always made SMS metadata collection an opt-in part of the setup process. But take a look at the difference between today’s opt-in screen and one users saw back in 2016.
Today, Messenger gives you the options to “turn on” metadata collection, opt-out, or learn more. But before it faced criticism in 2016, the only options were “OK” or “settings.” So, it’s likely many people gave Facebook permission at one time without realizing it.
This is an excellent illustration of the web that Facebook weaves. In the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook allowed the personal data of 50 million users to get into the hands of a third-party app, in part because its policies gave up the data of users’ friends based on permission from a single user. When that third party transferred the information to a political data analysis firm, which was a violation of Facebook’s policies, Facebook did nothing when it found out in 2015 but issue a stern warning and make Cambridge Analytica sign a document promising that the data was deleted. Now, Facebook says that it no longer shotguns that data out to developers based on a single permission, so apparently everyone should feel okay going forward.
Explaining what’s going on shouldn’t be so difficult or time-consuming. Facebook claims this is all designed to make things more convenient for you. But it doesn’t have to constantly track your text messages and the duration of your calls just to capture your contacts list. That could be a one-time thing that you do when you set the service up, and Facebook could periodically ask if you want to do another import a month later.
However, Facebook has turned a convenience into an excuse for grabbing more information that it can combine with everything else to make a perfect psychological and social profile of you, the user. And it has demonstrated that it can’t be trusted to keep that data to itself.
Mark Zuckerburg told CNN last week that he was open to more regulations being applied to his platform. “You know, I think in general technology is an increasingly important trend in the world and I actually think the question is more what’s the right regulation rather than ‘yes’ or ‘no’ should it be regulated,” he said. This is foolish because government regulations will undoubtedly get screwed up and lead to unintended consequences.
But if Mark insists, the government could create strict terms of service requirements for what a company explains to a user before they sign up. Those regulations could require clear examples of how data might be used and even require users to complete a simple quiz to show they understand before finalizing the app’s setup. Of course, that kind of burdensome activity wouldn’t be necessary if Facebook would just make everything clear on its own. Unfortunately, with congressional hearings scheduled, and government agency investigations underway, it may be too late.
[ Ars Technica, Facebook]

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