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Facebook's Off-Facebook Activity tool is now available to everyone


Karlston

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Facebook's Off-Facebook Activity tool is now available to everyone

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced today that a new privacy tool called Off-Facebook Activity is now available to Facebook users around the globe.

 

Designed to improve transparency, Off-Facebook Activity provides information about data that third-party businesses share with Facebook. Facebook uses the provided information to show advertisement to its users, for suggestions, e.g. groups or businesses, or to help organizations "understand how their website, app, or ads are performing".

 

The tool provides a summary of the information and an option to clear it from the Facebook account.

 

Off-Facebook Activity should be available in desktop and mobile versions of Facebook. Facebook users need to open the Settings of the service and select "Your Facebook Information" from the left column and then "Off-Facebook Activity" on the page that opens.

 

Tip: you can open the page directly as well using this link: https://www.facebook.com/off_facebook_activity/

 

off-facebook-activity.png

 

A click on the link opens a summary and information. It starts with a list of companies or applications that shared data with Facebook. These are just examples and may not reflect the full list of companies and apps that shared data with Facebook.

 

The page provides an explanation that includes an example

  1. Jane buys a pair of shoes from an online clothing and shoe store.
  2. The store shares Jane's activity with us using our business tools.
  3. We receive Jane's off-Facebook activity and we save it with her Facebook account. The activity is saved as "visited the Clothes and Shoes website" and "made a purchase".
  4. Jane sees an ad on Facebook for a 10% off coupon on her next shoe or clothing purchase from the online store.

off-facebook-activity-page.png

 

More interesting that the summary or the description is the "what you can do" section. If lists the following options:

  • Manage your Off-Facebook Activity -- (requires the account password on desktop). Lists apps and websites that shared information with Facebook. Each is listed with a name and when the information was received. You can click on any item to display details, e.g. how many interactions were shared, and settings to turn off future activity for that particular company, or to give feedback.
  • Clear History -- The option disconnects the data from the account but does not prevent Facebook from receiving future data. Also note that Facebook uses the term "disconnect" and not delete or remove; this suggests that the data may not be deleted outright or at all.
  • Access your information -- A list of information that is categorized by Facebook; not necessarily relevant to Off-Facebook Activity.
  • Download your information -- An option to download information that Facebook has about your account and your activity.
  • Manage Future Activity -- An option to turn off Off-Facebook Activity entirely to prevent the linking of third-party data with the Facebook account in the future. Also provides options to manage individual items that you have blocked using "Manage your Off-Facebook Activity".

 

facebook-activity-shared.png

 

If you don't want Facebook to use third-party data and associate with your account, you need to do two things:

  1. Clear the History.
  2. Disable Off-Facebook Activity.

Note that Facebook linked the Future Activity option to its login system. A warning is displayed to users who click on the turn-off option that doing so will prevent the user from "logging into apps and websites with Facebook".

Closing Words

The Off-Facebook Activity tool may be an eye-opener to some users as it lists apps, websites, and companies that may have shared data with Facebook. Sharing does not necessarily mean that the data was sold to Facebook but it is possible that this was the case.

 

 

Source: Facebook's Off-Facebook Activity tool is now available to everyone (gHacks - Martin Brinkmann)

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Facebook's Off-Facebook Activity tool is now available to everyone

Everyone means fb users.

 

AFAIR, there were some posts about fb tracking fb-friends without fb account.

Wondering if there is a similar tool for non-fb users, something like "What data has fb about my ip?"

 

Edit: fb-friends without fb account? Hummm... what was that?

Anyway still looking for something like "What data has fb about my ip?"

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Facebook's 'Clear History' Tool Doesn't Clear Shit

 

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When we talk about Facebook’s myriad foibles and fA**kups, we’re usually laying the blame on things that happen within the Big Blue App, or, increasingly, the social network’s CEO.

 

What’s less discussed are the company’s ties to the potentially millions of sites and services using its software—but now, thankfully, we can get a window into that for ourselves. But don’t get too excited.

 

In a blog post earlier today, the famously privacy-conscious Mark Zuckerberg announced that—in honor of Data Privacy Day, which is apparently a thing—the official rollout of a long-awaited Off-Facebook Activity tool that allows Facebook users to monitor and manage the connections between Facebook profiles and their off-platform activity.

 

“To help shed more light on these practices that are common yet not always well understood, today we’re introducing a new way to view and control your off-Facebook activity,” Zuckerberg said in the post. “Off-Facebook Activity lets you see a summary of the apps and websites that send us information about your activity, and clear this information from your account if you want to.”

 

Zuck’s use of the phrases “control your off-Facebook activity” and “clear this information from your account” is kinda misleading—you’re not really controlling or clearing much of anything. By using this tool, you’re just telling Facebook to put the data it has on you into two separate buckets that are otherwise mixed together. Put another way, Facebook is offering a one-stop-shop to opt-out of any ties between the sites and services you peruse daily that have some sort of Facebook software installed and your own-platform activity on Facebook or Instagram.

 

The only thing you’re clearing is a connection Facebook made between its data and the data it gets from third parties, not the data itself.

 

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Image: Facebook

 

As an ad-tech reporter, my bread and butter involves downloading shit that does god-knows-what with your data, which is why I shouldn’t’ve been surprised that Facebook hoovered data from more 520 partners across the internet—either sites I’d visited or apps I’d downloaded. For Gizmodo alone, Facebook tracked “252 interactions” drawn from the handful of plug-ins our blog has installed. (To be clear, you’re going to run into these kinds of trackers e.v.e.r.y.w.h.e.r.e.—not just on our site.)

 

These plug-ins—or “business tools,” as Facebook describes them—are the pipeline that the company uses to ascertain your off-platform activity and tie it to your on-platform identity. As Facebook describes it:

- Jane buys a pair of shoes from an online clothing and shoe store.

- The store shares Jane’s activity with us using our business tools.

- We receive Jane’s off-Facebook activity and we save it with her Facebook account. The activity is saved as “visited the Clothes and Shoes website” and “made a purchase”.

- Jane sees an ad on Facebook for a 10% off coupon on her next shoe or clothing purchase from the online store.

Here’s the catch, though: When I hit the handy “clear history” button that Facebook now provides, it won’t do jack shit to stop a given shoe store from sharing my data with Facebook—which explicitly laid this out for me when I hit that button:

Your activity history will be disconnected from your account. We’ll continue to receive your activity from the businesses and organizations you visit in the future.

Yes, it’s confusing. Baffling, really. But basically, Facebook has profiles on users and non-users alike. Those of you who have Facebook profiles can use the new tool to disconnect your Facebook data from the data the company receives from third parties. Facebook will still have that third-party-collected data and it will continue to collect more data, but that bucket of data won’t be connected to your Facebook identity.

 

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The data third parties collect about you technically isn’t Facebook’s responsibility, to begin with. If I buy a pair of new sneakers from Steve Madden where that purchase or browsing data goes is ultimately in Steve Madden’s metaphorical hands. And thanks to the wonders of targeted advertising, even the sneakers I’m purchasing in-store aren’t safe from being added as a data point that can be tied to the collective profile Facebook’s gathered on me as a consumer. Naturally, it behooves whoever runs marketing at Steve Madden—or anywhere, really—to plug in as many of those data points as they possibly can.

 

For the record, I also tried toggling my off-Facebook activity to keep it from being linked to my account, but was told that, while the company would still be getting this information from third parties, it would just be “disconnected from [my] account.”

 

Put another way: The way I browse any number of sites and apps will ultimately still make its way to Facebook, and still be used for targeted advertising across... those sites and apps. Only now, my on-Facebook life—the cat groups I join, the statuses I comment on, the concerts I’m “interested” in (but never actually attend)—won’t be a part of that profile.

 

Or put another way: Facebook just announced that it still has its tentacles in every part of your life in a way that’s impossible to untangle yourself from. Now, it just doesn’t need the social network to do it.

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