Samsung Phone Users Perturbed to Find They Can't Delete Facebook
Samsung Phone Users Perturbed to Find They Can't Delete
Facebook
·
Galaxy owners take to Twitter to complain about
permanent app
·
Pre-install deals are common, but privacy
concerns are rising
By Sarah Frier January 8, 2019, 10:55 AM PST
Nick Winke, a photographer in the Pacific northwest, was
perusing internet forums when he came across a complaint that alarmed him: On
certain Samsung Electronics Co. smartphones, users aren’t allowed to delete the
Facebook app.
Winke bought his Samsung Galaxy S8, an Android-based
device that comes with Facebook’s social network already installed, when it was
introduced in 2017. He has used the Facebook app to connect with old friends
and to share pictures of natural landscapes and his Siamese cat -- but he
didn’t want to be stuck with it. He tried to remove the program from his phone,
but the chatter proved true -- it was undeletable. He found only an option to
"disable," and he wasn’t sure what that meant.
“It just absolutely baffles me that if I wanted to
completely get rid of Facebook that it essentially would still be on my phone,
which brings up more questions,” Winke said in an interview. “Can they still
track your information, your location, or whatever else they do? We the
consumer should have say in what we want and don’t want on our products.”
Consumers have become more alert about their digital
rights and more vigilant about privacy in the past year, following revelations
about Facebook’s information-sharing practices and regulators’ heightened
scrutiny of online data collection. Some people have deleted their Facebook
accounts in protest of the company’s lapses, while others simply want to make
sure they have the option to do so. Many Android phone users have begun to
question Samsung’s deal to sell phones with a permanent version of Facebook --
and some of them are complaining on social media.
A Facebook spokesperson said the disabled version of the
app acts like it’s been deleted, so it doesn’t continue collecting data or
sending information back to Facebook. But there’s rarely communication with the
consumer about the process. The Menlo Park, California-based company said
whether the app is deletable or not depends on various pre-install deals Facebook
has made with phone manufacturers, operating systems and mobile operators
around the world over the years, including Samsung. Facebook, the world’s
largest social network, wouldn’t disclose the financial nature of the
agreements, but said they’re meant to give the consumer "the best"
phone experience right after opening the box.
Balwinder Singh’s experience wasn’t what he would
consider the best. Singh, who lives in the Susquehanna Valley of the eastern
U.S. and works in transportation, bought his Samsung phone seven months ago. He
first tried to delete the Facebook app when he was setting up the device.
“My news feed was full of negative stuff, people going
crazy on social media,” he said. “It was affecting me emotionally and
mentally.” Even after disabling the app, he was bothered to still have it on
his phone.
Samsung, the world’s largest smartphone maker, said it
provides a pre-installed Facebook app on selected models with options to
disable it, and once it’s disabled, the app is no longer running. Facebook
declined to provide a list of the partners with which it has deals for
permanent apps, saying that those agreements vary by region and type. There is
no complete list available online, and consumers may not know if Facebook is
pre-loaded unless they specifically ask a customer service representative when
they purchase a phone.
Consumer-advocacy groups have been skeptical of such
arrangements for years, according to Jeff Chester, executive director of the
Center for Digital Democracy.
“It’s only recently that people have become to understand
that these apps really power the spy in your pocket,” he said. “Companies
should be filing public documents on these deals, and Facebook should turn over
public documents that show there is no data collection when the app is
disabled.”
Facebook isn’t the only company whose apps show up on
smartphones by default. A T-Mobile US Inc. list of apps built into its version
of the Samsung Galaxy S9, for example, includes the social network as well as
Amazon.com Inc. The phone also comes loaded with many Google apps such as
YouTube, Google Play Music and Gmail; Google is the creator of the Android
software that powers the phone. Other phone makers and service providers,
including LG Electronics Inc., Sony Corp., Verizon Communications Inc. and
AT&T Inc., have made similar deals with app makers. When Twitter’s app is
loaded on a new phone by default, it wouldn’t collect any data unless a user
had an account or created a new one, and opened the app and logged in, the
company said.
But Facebook, which has spent the past year apologizing
for security breaches and data privacy scandals, is the one drawing ire about
its irrevocable presence on Samsung’s phones. “Very slimy,” Twitter user
Gopinath Pandalai in Bangalore, who goes by @gopibella, wrote on the site in
October. “Been a Samsung customer for 10 years. Time to move on.”
In December, Justin McMurry, whose Twitter handle is
@BoutSebm, wrote that he considered Facebook a privacy threat. “If I can’t
delete it, this will be the last Samsung product I ever own."
Apple Inc., whose iPhone is the top-selling smartphone in
the U.S., doesn’t pre-install Facebook or any other third-party apps on its new
phones.
José Cortés, a Spaniard living in Sweden, has started using
Facebook on his phone more infrequently, sharing less because he doesn’t like
the way it broadcasts his activity to his friends. If there’s an event coming
up on Facebook, he never marks that he’s going or interested, even if he is,
because he dislikes that his attendance will advertise the event to his other
friends.
“I understand Samsung is trying to make it easy for the
user, but I don’t like that it does not allow me to uninstall,” he said. For
his next phone, he said he’ll consider buying something else.
— With assistance by Selina Wang, and Sam Kim
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