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Andrews writes: "Last week, Facebook filed documents with the government that will allow it to sell shares of stock to the public. It is estimated to be worth at least $75 billion. But unlike other big-ticket corporations, it doesn't have an inventory of widgets or gadgets, cars or phones. Facebook's inventory consists of personal data - yours and mine."

Facebook logo, 06/15/09. (art: Facebook)
Facebook logo, 06/15/09. (art: Facebook)



Facebook Is Using You

By Lori Andrews, The New York Times

05 February 12

 

AST week, Facebook filed documents with the government that will allow it to sell shares of stock to the public. It is estimated to be worth at least $75 billion. But unlike other big-ticket corporations, it doesn't have an inventory of widgets or gadgets, cars or phones. Facebook's inventory consists of personal data - yours and mine.

Facebook makes money by selling ad space to companies that want to reach us. Advertisers choose key words or details - like relationship status, location, activities, favorite books and employment - and then Facebook runs the ads for the targeted subset of its 845 million users. If you indicate that you like cupcakes, live in a certain neighborhood and have invited friends over, expect an ad from a nearby bakery to appear on your page. The magnitude of online information Facebook has available about each of us for targeted marketing is stunning. In Europe, laws give people the right to know what data companies have about them, but that is not the case in the United States.

Facebook made $3.2 billion in advertising revenue last year, 85 percent of its total revenue. Yet Facebook's inventory of data and its revenue from advertising are small potatoes compared to some others. Google took in more than 10 times as much, with an estimated $36.5 billion in advertising revenue in 2011, by analyzing what people sent over Gmail and what they searched on the Web, and then using that data to sell ads. Hundreds of other companies have also staked claims on people's online data by depositing software called cookies or other tracking mechanisms on people's computers and in their browsers. If you've mentioned anxiety in an e-mail, done a Google search for "stress" or started using an online medical diary that lets you monitor your mood, expect ads for medications and services to treat your anxiety.

Ads that pop up on your screen might seem useful, or at worst, a nuisance. But they are much more than that. The bits and bytes about your life can easily be used against you. Whether you can obtain a job, credit or insurance can be based on your digital doppelgänger - and you may never know why you've been turned down.

Material mined online has been used against people battling for child custody or defending themselves in criminal cases. LexisNexis has a product called Accurint for Law Enforcement, which gives government agents information about what people do on social networks. The Internal Revenue Service searches Facebook and MySpace for evidence of tax evaders' income and whereabouts, and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services has been known to scrutinize photos and posts to confirm family relationships or weed out sham marriages. Employers sometimes decide whether to hire people based on their online profiles, with one study indicating that 70 percent of recruiters and human resource professionals in the United States have rejected candidates based on data found online. A company called Spokeo gathers online data for employers, the public and anyone else who wants it. The company even posts ads urging "HR Recruiters - Click Here Now!" and asking women to submit their boyfriends' e-mail addresses for an analysis of their online photos and activities to learn "Is He Cheating on You?"

Stereotyping is alive and well in data aggregation. Your application for credit could be declined not on the basis of your own finances or credit history, but on the basis of aggregate data - what other people whose likes and dislikes are similar to yours have done. If guitar players or divorcing couples are more likely to renege on their credit-card bills, then the fact that you've looked at guitar ads or sent an e-mail to a divorce lawyer might cause a data aggregator to classify you as less credit-worthy. When an Atlanta man returned from his honeymoon, he found that his credit limit had been lowered to $3,800 from $10,800. The switch was not based on anything he had done but on aggregate data. A letter from the company told him, "Other customers who have used their card at establishments where you recently shopped have a poor repayment history with American Express."

Even though laws allow people to challenge false information in credit reports, there are no laws that require data aggregators to reveal what they know about you. If I've Googled "diabetes" for a friend or "date rape drugs" for a mystery I'm writing, data aggregators assume those searches reflect my own health and proclivities. Because no laws regulate what types of data these aggregators can collect, they make their own rules.

In 2007 and 2008, the online advertising company NebuAd contracted with six Internet service providers to install hardware on their networks that monitored users' Internet activities and transmitted that data to NebuAd's servers for analysis and use in marketing. For an average of six months, NebuAd copied every e-mail, Web search or purchase that some 400,000 people sent over the Internet. Other companies, like Healthline Networks Inc., have in-house limits on which private information they will collect. Healthline does not use information about people's searches related to H.I.V., impotence or eating disorders to target ads to people, but it will use information about bipolar disorder, overactive bladder and anxiety, which can be as stigmatizing as the topics on its privacy-protected list.

In the 1970s, a professor of communication studies at Northwestern University named John McKnight popularized the term "redlining" to describe the failure of banks, insurers and other institutions to offer their services to inner city neighborhoods. The term came from the practice of bank officials who drew a red line on a map to indicate where they wouldn't invest. But use of the term expanded to cover a wide array of racially discriminatory practices, such as not offering home loans to African-Americans, even those who were wealthy or middle class.

Now the map used in redlining is not a geographic map, but the map of your travels across the Web. The term Weblining describes the practice of denying people opportunities based on their digital selves. You might be refused health insurance based on a Google search you did about a medical condition. You might be shown a credit card with a lower credit limit, not because of your credit history, but because of your race, sex or ZIP code or the types of Web sites you visit.

Data aggregation has social implications as well. When young people in poor neighborhoods are bombarded with advertisements for trade schools, will they be more likely than others their age to forgo college? And when women are shown articles about celebrities rather than stock market trends, will they be less likely to develop financial savvy? Advertisers are drawing new redlines, limiting people to the roles society expects them to play.

Data aggregators' practices conflict with what people say they want. A 2008 Consumer Reports poll of 2,000 people found that 93 percent thought Internet companies should always ask for permission before using personal information, and 72 percent wanted the right to opt out of online tracking. A study by Princeton Survey Research Associates in 2009 using a random sample of 1,000 people found that 69 percent thought that the United States should adopt a law giving people the right to learn everything a Web site knows about them. We need a do-not-track law, similar to the do-not-call one. Now it's not just about whether my dinner will be interrupted by a telemarketer. It's about whether my dreams will be dashed by the collection of bits and bytes over which I have no control and for which companies are currently unaccountable.

Lori Andrews is a law professor at Chicago-Kent College of Law and the author of "I Know Who You Are and I Saw What You Did: Social Networks and the Death of Privacy."

 

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+46 # zitzwitz@mac.com 2012-02-05 15:22
This is scary stuff. I suppose if this answer is a negative one
I could loose or earn points. What is also scary is, if one is interested in a given subject because of an article in the news or just curios, lets even say what are the statistics of productivity for people with some disease. (I am leaving out to name any, who knows maybe I will be red-listed). I often wondered how come I get lots of advertising in one particular subject.
 
 
+4 # KittatinyHawk 2012-02-05 20:50
Some friends asked me to join years back when a Discussion group for a disease was revamping. I then warned all that marko broke the Privacy act and was selling our addys out.
I try to avoid except to occassionally say hi to friends around world who are living with. Then I get spam.
Let the 1% sell stock, he is a greedy person, knew that years ago.

Disease is not a crime though the ones who create them should be given our life sentences with all the side affects at once. Gee when I grow up I want to develop disease so people can die because we pretend it was stolen while we actually did a lil test on some guinea pigs, human ones. Just couldn't get results we wanted from all the animals we tested!
Awareness is my award, support is how I made it this far. Live free of FB!
 
 
+21 # giraffee2012 2012-02-05 16:18
I went onto Facebook - and now I'm getting SPAM constantly. I will open a hotmail and change my email on Facebook and hope!
 
 
-6 # KittatinyHawk 2012-02-05 20:54
Lots of foreign bs
 
 
+69 # ivories29 2012-02-05 16:28
This article hit home with me. I just left Facebook after being a member for 2 years; I am not a teen-ager, I have a rich and busy creative life, I don't need or desire "social" networks, and I am very afraid of the continual invasion of privacy practiced on the internet. I am sorry for the young people whose lives have been manipulated--some even ended--because of their obsessive reliance on Facebook and Twitter for social net-working. I am not anti-progress, or anti-technology--but I'd like to see positive proof of the social worth of these groups. The right to privacy is too important to be overshadowed by "social media," and the blatant advertising assault on every user is frightening and disgusting. So good-bye, Facebook! Count me out.
Susan Kagan
 
 
+26 # Billy Bob 2012-02-05 17:13
Good for you! I finally talked my wife out of her facebook account. It's no place for anyone who cares about their family or personal freedom.
 
 
+22 # djnova50 2012-02-05 16:45
My sons encouraged me to join Facebook. I created an account and wouldn't you know that I would start getting Facebook spam. I complained to the Facebook administrators/managers about how much spam I was getting and how to get rid of it. I did not hear back and kept getting the spam. I went ahead and deactivated my Facebook account and the spam has dropped off considerably. I don't recommend Facebook to anybody.
 
 
+28 # futhark 2012-02-05 17:02
A few days ago I received three successive emails thanking me for opening a Facebook account. I have been adamantly opposed to the whole concept of Facebook since first hearing about it and was mystified by these emails, since I had certainly NOT tried to open a Facebook account. I asked my daughter if she opened one for me. She denied doing so. I made the mistake of opening one of the emails just to see what it was about and got a message thanking me for confirming my account. I did no such thing!

I deeply resent the intrusion of Facebook into my privacy by their bogus attempt to lure me into being manipulated and exposed by them. I have no need of Facebook, am indeed anti-"progress" and anti-technology when they serve no useful or ethical purpose. The social network movement and privacy-invasion business can go to Hell!

BUZZ OFF, FACEBOOK!
 
 
+27 # Billy Bob 2012-02-05 17:10
A prime example of an industry that needs MORE regulation for the good of all of us.
 
 
+16 # je proteste 2012-02-05 17:38
Never had a Facebook account, never will.

But what are the names of the six ISPs that sold customer data to NebuAd in 2007 and 2008? They allowed these vampires to copy emails?!

Now that's an invasion of privacy - and no one signed on for it.
 
 
+18 # carolharveysf 2012-02-05 18:33
None of you --- or me--- will be exempt by leaving Facebook. They track everything. They are tracking us now. I guess you have to balance how important it is to use the internet at all -- they've been doing this everywhere for years.
 
 
-15 # barbaratodish 2012-02-05 18:51
I, for one, hardly look at any ads, so IMHO advertizers are wasting their $. And if we all lived our lives openly, without defensivenss and lived so that we HAD zero secerts, there would be little, if anything that anyone could do to conspire against you, other than cast aspersions on your character and even if they did conspire, lie, bully threaten, etc,. you, they are after all only words, in digital space, in digital time, why take it so seriously? You can always disconcert the conspirators, bullies, enemies and any conspiracy with humor. (And for those who have their credid reduced, we can always hurt the credit card companies and banks and product and service companies, etc., by voting with our feet by walking away or by cutting up our credit cards, etc.
 
 
-12 # hwatt 2012-02-05 20:16
So true, @barbaratodish.
Words are only words in digital space and a troll's words are sometimes inspirational.
 
 
+2 # X Dane 2012-02-05 23:10
barbaratodish. I think you need to reed the article again. There are a slew of things various agencies can do to make you miserable, and you can not do much about it. So do not make light of it.
 
 
-3 # barbaratodish 2012-02-06 10:48
Quoting
barbaratodish. I think you need to reed the article again. There are a slew of things various agencies can do to make you miserable, and you can not do much about it. So do not make light of it.

Others, including agencies, can only PRACTICE making me miserable. I am a master (mistress?) at making MYSELF miserable, if I so chose! Likewise, I through my OWN HUMAN agency, am in charge and responsible for making MYSELF joyous, too! Instead of settling for relative (I usually avoid the blood type "relatives, also lol) happiness, I aim for, and sometimes achieve ABSOLUTE joy!
 
 
+2 # Planting Seeds 2012-02-06 17:34
"The worst lies are the lies we tell ourselves. We live in denial of what we do, even what we think. We do this because we're afraid." ~ Richard Bach

Something to ponder...
 
 
0 # barbaratodish 2012-02-09 00:16
Quoting
"The worst lies are the lies we tell ourselves. We live in denial of what we do, even what we think. We do this because we're afraid." ~ Richard Bach

Something to ponder...

Dostoevsky said something similar in "The Brothers Karamazov": "And above all...don't lie to yourself. The man who lies to himself and listens to his own lie comes to such a pass that he cannot distinguish the truth within him or around him, and so loses all respect for himself and for others. And having no respect, he ceases to love, and, in order to occupy himself and distract himself without love, he gives way to passions and coarse pleasures and sinks to bestiality in his vices...all from continually lying to other men and to himself"
 
 
+4 # bugbuster 2012-02-06 09:37
As long as entities behave as you would expect, then well and good. But sometimes they make will stupid assumptions about you based on their own ignorance--things no sane and sentient person would expect--and you are in the firing line.

For example, if you have an avocational passion for the guitar, and "professional" guitar players have financial issues, then you go in that bin, and when you with your 830 credit rating suddenly need quick cash in a crisis, you find yourself SOL. *That's* the issue.
 
 
+30 # Adoregon 2012-02-05 19:38
Facebook = egos on parade
 
 
+2 # KittatinyHawk 2012-02-05 21:01
I left my FB and I do allow my posts on certain subjects be read by friends I have around the world, since I do not fly.
But I keep no info, when others ask me to sign in thru I do not.
I got people to undo years ago all info, they did. None of the sites are any good Google is tracking, Twitter, FB and they all sell our addys. Organizations sell your info for their money. I told them not to, then I unsub. Learned lots of lessons, crashes results from virus. Saddest one was the Budweiser Horses for the NASCAR Earnhardt Jr Fun.
Now I do little, but I do allow an anti GOP on my FB, Anti Komen is on now...guess what we got plenty thumbs up now their is site to continue support for organizations except theirs. So let FB do the blogs to keep support for Organizations, let them live in a cloud of smoke. You will not change the Zucker 1%ers...but when he allows OWS to continue a log, Twitter also I cannot bitch, we need all the Notice, Awareness we can get. Who knows Zucker may actually not donate to the scum

People need people, now more than ever before...FB helps people meet no matter what we feel about it. Too bad he sold us out to spam, junk mail.
 
 
+3 # Allie R 2012-02-05 23:24
fB ads? I ignore them also. To protect yourself, do set the privacy tight (settings are very important) and do not exhibit personal data. In a sense, trust no one, really, especially eyes and minds you don't know. If you use it as an idea generator and connection for almost live news, its useful. However, one must pay attention and be self-protecting. No more regs please !!! Just take responsibility to be self-accountable for learning the program settings to protect yourself. You lock the front door right?

So learn the program and then you can en
 
 
+3 # tswhiskers 2012-02-06 08:54
I'm with ivories 29. If you want to talk with someone use email. In this age of privacy loss and constant advertising Facebook is a luxury no one can afford.
 
 
+2 # Capn Canard 2012-02-06 11:06
I refuse to believe that Mark Zuckerberg would ever use people, as if they were sitting ducks, to make himself a billionaire dollars. That just does not seem like a very responsible thing to do, especially for a someone who dropped out of college.
 
 
0 # jon 2012-02-06 18:19
Very funny, Capn.
 
 
+1 # reiverpacific 2012-02-06 14:54
'Scuse my asking but as we are asked to share RSN with our friends on Facebook and Twitter, especially we "low-income readers" (which I do, especially when I can't quite come up with a small monthly donation), isn't this like punchin' oneself in the gob to be heard?
I enjoy F.B. for allowing me to keep in touch with friends all over the world and even ol' buddies dating back to high-school, my old rugby days and musicians I've played with. I do recommend RSN to everybody and post my political opinions and posts from my unabashedly progressive lefty-and-proud-of-it perspective thereon, including posts from RSN and other sites.
That's all the information I have to give the shadowy powers or anybody else and they're welcome to read them any way they like -hope they have a good larf occasionally, as I often intend, includin' at myself.
 
 
0 # X Dane 2012-02-06 16:51
reiverpacific. You can simply email the article to your friends. I did.
Give your e-mail address to your friends and write each other. you do not need F B. You may pay a price for using Face Book. if some of your information is used.

Capn Canard can't believe that Zuckerberg would ever use people?? I think Capn Canard is a nice person, and Zuckerberg may well be too, but some of his business partners may have fewer scruples. And business is business.

Some people on Facebook divulge an incredible amount of information about themselves.......and about friends too.
Obviously a lot of it can be used against them.

I do not reveal anything about myself or others, and to make CERTAIN, I will get off altogether.

I got on by accident, when the Iranian journalist was jailed in Iran after the election in 2009, Bahir? I wanted to sign a petition to have him freed, and was instructed to sign on Face Book.

Consequently hundreds of people I don't know and have never heard of, wanted to be my friend. Totally crazy.
 
 
0 # reiverpacific 2012-02-07 17:40
Quoting
reiverpacific. You can simply email the article to your friends. I did.
Give your e-mail address to your friends and write each other. you do not need F B. You may pay a price for using Face Book. if some of your information is used.
Some people on Facebook divulge an incredible amount of information about themselves.......and about friends too.
Obviously a lot of it can be used against them.
-
I do not reveal anything about myself or others, and to make CERTAIN, I will get off altogether.
-
Consequently hundreds of people I don't know and have never heard of, wanted to be my friend. Totally crazy.

I'm not that paranoid, nor self-important and am as aware of the "National Security State" as anybody. As I said, I air my opinions and will keep doing so until and if they "Come for me". Hell "they" could get our I.D. from RSN if they really wanted to -and maybe do. And as I stated, we are invited by RSN to share on both Twitter, which I don't use AND F.B.
Sorry but I find F.B. valuable for many reasons, especially keeping up with friends worldwide and often get info' from my home patch in Scotland, France and Spain that's not on the news as well as the personal stuff. I don't use F.B. as a gossip column like many but I refuse to hide in the shadows.
Perhaps someone from RSN could comment on this?
 
 
+2 # Planting Seeds 2012-02-06 17:27
This gives an all new meaning to the saying, "Curiosity killed the cat." Maybe the think to do is like the SOPA protest and get millions to stop commenting for a day or erasing all your personal info from your online profiles, clear all your browser cookies after each online session, install software that masks your IP location and stuff like that. In other words, do whatever it takes to confuse the hell out of them and write letters to Congress demanding the immediate legislation needed to mitigate the fallout mentioned hear. Yet another example of technology racing ahead of humans ability to cope with it and make appropriate laws to ensure a stable society and economy.
 
 
0 # Chris S. 2012-02-07 17:31
I've been reluctant to Join Facebook for the above reasons. Then I thought it might be worth it for the social activist potential that it has.
But suppose our comments really hit a nerve or we do some whistleblowing. Big brother is watching us and anything from resulting from that 'redlining , profiling ' could happen. It's scary .
 
 
0 # Linda 2012-02-09 07:03
I totally agree with what you said in your article about Face Book selling our information . I will also add that Face Book contributes to the Republican Party so using Face Book helps the Republican Party with contributions .
The problem is that almost all the sites online link to Face Book and some you can't even access unless you are a Face Book member .
If these sites wouldn't link to Face Book I wouldn't even think of being a Face Book member . I quit Care 2 because sense it started linking to Face Book it has also started posting more right wing propaganda .
 

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