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  • Facebook Tracks Your Every Move, Employee Claims

    FACEBOOK TRACKS YOUR EVERY MOVE, EMPLOYEE CLAIMS

    Tert.am
    11:50 ~U 21.01.10

    Facebook is tracking your every move on the site - or so says one
    purported Facebook employee, according to an anonymous interview with
    the Rumpus, reports PC World.

    In the interview, the Facebook employee, whose identity was protected
    so she wouldn't lose her job for talking to the media, also said that
    Facebook employees have relatively easy access to user accounts.

    Here are the highlights from the interview:

    Facebook Tracks You

    Every time you view a profile, look at a picture, send a message or
    take any other action on Facebook, the company records that action,
    according to the Facebook employee. At first glance, that sounds like a
    scary prospect, but the engineer argues that the company does this to
    deliver a better product. As a result of this tracking, for example,
    you can get suggestions to reconnect with a Facebook friend.

    The employee also claimed that as a result of Facebook's tracking,
    when you search for a friend on Facebook the auto complete function
    lists your friends by the people you interact with the most.

    Universal Access

    There used to be a universal password that Facebook employees could use
    to view any Facebook account, the anonymous employee claims. But the
    password has since been discontinued, and now Facebook uses a different
    system where employees must provide a reason in writing for logging
    into a user's account. If the employee cannot back up the reason they
    had for accessing someone's account the employee can be fired.

    Facebook Can Read Your Messages

    The employee claims that Facebook has all of your messages, deleted or
    not, stored in a database that any Facebook employee can access. The
    notion that your Facebook messages are stored in a database is about
    as stunning a discovery as finding out my laptop has a keyboard,
    writes Ian Paul in PC World.

    Then again, if any Facebook employee can just query that database
    to read your personal messages any time they like, well, that's a
    problem. I certainly hope Facebook has better safeguards for personal
    messages than that.

    So what do we make of all this? According to the author, "Personally,
    I don't think these issues are too concerning. The bigger issue
    around Facebook and security isn't with Facebook itself, but all
    those third-party services that have access to your data whenever
    you authorize a Facebook application."
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