Yes, Facebook is stalking you
Yes, Facebook is stalking you
By Megan McArdle October 10, 2015 | 5:15am
Facebook is following you around the Web. You knew that,
right?
How else would Facebook know to serve that panda video
straight into your news feed, and leave your college friend’s ill-informed rant
about Pacific trade deals in the dark bowels of its servers? How else would it
know to serve you with 7,000 ads for wedding dress vendors the very day you
announce your engagement?
Facebook knows what you like. It knows what you don’t
like. It probably knows whether you have been naughty or nice, and will be
selling that data to Santa this Christmas season.
This bothers many people, especially since Facebook keeps
expanding the list of things it knows about you, and the ways it is willing to
use that data to make money.
The recent announcement that Facebook would soon target
ads using your “likes” and “shares” has triggered some Olympic-level teeth-
gnashing from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, because Facebook will get
information from you not just when you actually like, “like” something, but
when you load a page that has a “like” button on it.
The EFF wants Facebook to agree to use a “Do Not Track”
standard that will keep all that potentially profitable data from the greedy
eyes of advertisers.
Of course people should be able to hide data about what
sites they use. But there’s a perfectly good way to do this: Stay signed out of
Facebook and tell your browser not to accept cookies or otherwise let
advertisers follow you around.
The problem is, this level of security is incredibly
inconvenient, because you have to spend a lot of time painfully re-entering
data. The other problem is that naive users, who probably don’t spend a lot of
time thinking about privacy, won’t bother.
But what obligation do companies really have to naive
users who don’t spend a lot of time thinking about privacy? Some of these users
undoubtedly don’t realize that they are exposed, but we should not reject out
of hand the possibility that most of them really don’t care enough. Enforcing
someone else’s preferences about privacy may not be liberating; it may be
counterproductive.
For let us remember that, dingy and dispiriting as it may
be, these companies do need to make money. There’s an old saying in
advertising: If you can’t figure out what’s being sold, then you’re the
product.
“Free” products and services usually aren’t; someone has
to finance them, and if they’re not charging you for your use, then they’re
charging someone else to use you.
Privacy-obsessed folks who carefully hide their activity
from the Internet, and ad-hating readers who install blockers, are effectively
having their free media and social media platforms subsidized by the folks who
don’t know or don’t mind. Because someone has to read the ads that pay the
bills.
The interwebs are full of splendid things that
social-media companies could do to make life easier for various people, and
perhaps better for society, if only those social-media companies didn’t have to
make money. The problem is, if the social-media companies implemented them all,
they would probably go out of business.
That would, of course, take care of problems like Twitter
harassment and Facebook’s stalker-like record of your Internet activity, but
most people do seem to like having those social-media platforms, even at the
expense of some exposure to these risks.
No one fix would be unlikely to bring about the death of
the firm. But there’s a problem with this, which you see a lot in politics:
Someone will say “We’ve got this modest plan, and it would only raise costs (or
lower revenue), by some small amount, say, what we could raise with a one-cent
surtax on ballpoint pens,” and this is true.
Except there are several thousand people who have
similarly modest plans, and the next thing you know ballpoint pens cost $20
apiece and the drugstore has to lock them up with the pregnancy tests.
The collective weight of the suggestions for improvement
(and the third-party software to facilitate same) might well make the Internet
kinder and gentler. It might also kill off many of the ways we spend our
Internet time.
Privacy matters, but privacy isn’t free. And the best
people to assess the tradeoffs between privacy, access, and convenience are
probably the individuals wielding the mouse, rather than the activists wielding
the megaphone.
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