Facebook Admits It Still Tracks Users Who Opt Out of Location Services Feature

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Facebook Admits It Still Tracks Users Who Opt Out of Location Services Feature

In a letter to two US lawmakers last week, social media giant Facebook admitted it still has ways of tracking users who disable Location Services, noting that “virtually all ads” on the platform are based on location.

“When Location Services is off, Facebook may still understand people’s locations using information people share through their activities on Facebook or through IP addresses and other network connections they use,” Facebook Vice President and Deputy Chief Privacy Officer Rob Sherman told Sens. Josh Hawley (R-MO) and Chris Coons (D-DE) in a December 12 letter.

​The eight-page letter responded to a November 19 request for information from the two lawmakers about the tech giant’s “privacy practices concerning location information,” which was, in turn, a response to a September 9 bulletin by Facebook announcing “updates to your device’s location settings.”

“The language in the blog post, however, indicates that Facebook may continue to collect location data despite user preferences, even if the user is not engaging with the app, and Facebook is simply deducing the user’s location from information about his or her internet connection. Given that most mobile devices are connected to the internet nearly all the time, whether through a cellular network or a Wi-Fi connection, this practice would allow Facebook to collect user location data almost constantly, irrespective of the user’s privacy preferences,” the lawmakers mused, adding a list of questions giving Facebook the opportunity to assuage their fears.

However, the Thursday response instead confirmed their worst fears.

​“Facebook admits it,” Hawley said in a December 17 tweet following the letter’s publication. “Turn off ‘location services’ and they’ll STILL track your location to make money (by sending you ads). There is no opting out. No control over your personal information. That’s Big Tech. And that’s why Congress needs to take action.”

“I appreciate Facebook’s attempts to inform users about their privacy choices. However, I am concerned that these efforts are insufficient and even misleading in light of how Facebook is actually treating user data,” Coons told CNBC in a Tuesday statement. “In their response to our letter, Facebook confirmed that there is no way for users to prevent Facebook from using their location and serving them ads based on that information, even when location access has been turned off.”

Beginning with the 2017 Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook has repeatedly been revealed to be either tracking or permitting the tracking of users’ personal information. British political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica collected the information of some 87 million users via use of several apps, the vast majority of whom were third-party users who were never given the chance to consent. A New York Times investigation published in December 2018 revealed that Facebook itself had sold access to roughly 2.2 billion users’ data to more than 150 firms – again, despite the fact that some of those users had opted out of all sharing.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

Facebook Admits It Still Tracks Users Who Opt Out of Location Services Feature

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