TECH Is Facebook eavesdropping on your phone conversations?

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
http://nbc4i.com/2016/05/24/spying-secrets-is-facebook-eavesdropping-on-your-phone-conversations/
(fair use applies)


Spying Secrets: Is Facebook eavesdropping on your phone conversations?

By WFLA STAFF Published: May 24, 2016, 11:10 am Updated: May 24, 2016, 11:10 am

TAMPA, FL (WFLA) – It’s irresistible, enticing and addicting. And, it’s available 24-hours a day all over the world to billions of people. Facebook beckons to users seemingly with a two-prong approach – both the pressure and pleasure to post.

We share stories, photos, triumphs and tragedies. It is ingrained into our daily lives so deeply that studies show people check Facebook, on average, 14 times a day. With all those eyes all over the globe dialed in and the purchasing power available, the online giant has tapped into a controversial delivery of data into its intelligence gathering. It all starts with something that you may not even realize is enabled on your phone.

USF Professor Kelli Burns knows the power of social media. The longtime educator incorporates it into her classroom curriculum every day and, in the fall, will lead a graduate course in social media analytics.

One online behemoth, in particular, is more popular than ever, she admits. “People are definitely addicted to Facebook. They’re addicted to their phones,” she told WFLA. “We have a two-second attention span. People are always checking to see what’s going on. Anytime you’re using your phone, any kind of information that you’re putting into your phone, looking at on your phone, Facebook can access that.”

With the continuous invitation for users to share, post and like, just how much information is Facebook learning about you?

According to Kelli, more than you could ever imagine. “I don’t think that people realize how much Facebook is tracking every move we’re making online,” she said. “Anything that you’re doing on your phone, Facebook is watching.” Indeed, they are.

So, be careful what you say in the presence of your phone. Facebook is not only watching, but also listening to your cell phone. It all starts with enabling your microphone feature in your settings. Once you do, choose your words carefully.

The site, itself, admits in an online statement, “We use your microphone to identify the things you’re listening to or watching, based on the music and TV matches we’re able to identify.” But, experts contend that the site is going a step further. In what some users are calling an alarming trend, described as “Big Brother,”

Facebook also listens for certain buzz words. Once identified, those words trigger an interesting response. Items are then carefully placed in your Facebook feed, specifically crafted with your interests front and center. Wait! What?

We tested the theory with Kelli, and even we were surprised by what we found and saw.

Kelli enabled the microphone feature and talked about her desire to go on safari, right down to her mode of transportation. “I’m really interested in going on an African safari. I think it’d be wonderful to ride in one of those jeeps,” she said aloud, phone in hand.

Less than 60 seconds later, the first post on her Facebook feed was a safari story that seemed to pop up out of nowhere. Turns out, it was a story that had been posted three hours earlier. And, after mentioning a jeep, a car ad also appeared on her page.

“That is kind of weird,” she laughed. “I’m still not so sure this isn’t just coincidence. I don’t think Facebook is really listening to our conversations.”

USF graduate student, Danielle Quichocho, is not at all fazed by the online “eavesdropping” with Facebook. In fact, she admits, “I don’t think it’s at all surprising,” The 22-year-old is planning her thesis around this very topic.

“It’s all about the bottom line, and if this is a way to fatten that bottom line, they’re gonna do it,” she told us. She maintains that people should be aware and educated as they use the popular app. Her motto? User beware.

So, how does she feel about Facebook using her interests as a basis for online ads, specifically designed for her in mind? “If you agree to the terms and conditions, then you know what to expect,” she said. She also advises, choose your words carefully!

“The internet is forever! You leave a footprint there. They’re going to find it. That’s just how it is,” she smiled.
 
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Publius

TB Fanatic
Much talk about once you open an account they track your every move on the internet. Close the account and find someone if your not good at it, but search the onboard operating system to remove everything Facebook from your hard drive.
 

gunnersmom

Veteran Member
I don't have facebook on my phone because I've always thought this very thing. I have no desire to expose my phone, contacts and texts to FB.
 

RCSAR

Veteran Member
I do not use facebook or even create an account anywhere on my gifted smartphone (tracphone galaxy core prime). I also tape over the camera lens. I have had it 10 days and just leave it by the always on radio.

I am not a stranger to radiophones as my first one was a bag phone.
I just know what they can do and treat it accordingly.

I treat it as an always on recorder and you should too.

My next projest is to disable the gps chip on the galaxy core prime on the PCB.
 

Oilpatch Hand

3-Bomb General, TB2K Army
Not directly in connection with Facebook listening to your conversations...

However, when I'm listening to a radio app on my iPad, and my Siri-enabled iPhone 6S Plus is sitting next to the iPad, Siri will occasionally turn itself on and start searching the web for text strings it hears on the radio, all by itself. It doesn't do it all the time, but every once in a while, Siri will start searching for stuff it heard somebody on the radio say.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
More power to 'em if they can. I don't have a smartphone and wouldn't touch FaceSpy with a ten foot selfie stick.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
Sort of related. Basically if you have a smart phone or use a tablet, consider privacy dead unless you really go out of your way to configure your own.

http://www.anonews.co/google-maps-h...-every-move-and-theres-a-website-to-prove-it/
(fair use applies)

Google Maps Has Been Tracking Your Every Move, And There’s A Website To Prove It
Email

By: Amando Flavio

It has emerged that Google has been tracking Smartphone users everywhere they go, indicating it with a red dot on a map to mark and make their location much clearer for identification.

If you do not believe this, you remember what appeared in the scene of the Minority Report, where Tom Cruise is on the run from the law, but is unable to avoid detection because everywhere he goes, there are constant retina scans feeding his location back to a central database? That is exactly what we are talking about here.

map2-660x440.jpg


You can even track yourself to see whether what we are talking about is true or not. Just log in with the same account you use on your Smartphone. You will be able to see records of everywhere you have been from day one of that month.

Just follow this link:

https://maps.google.com/locationhistory/b/0

It is an established fact that no matter what privacy settings you may try to implement, your information is still being collected and stored somewhere by our governments.

But somehow, you can minimize your tracking by adhering to the following procedure below.

Just follow the following steps carefully and share this information with your friends, families and anybody you know.

How To Disable Tracking & Erase Your Past History

To check whether location history is enabled on your account, go to the Google Maps Location history page and click the gear-icon button to access History settings.

You can disable or enable the service there. Disabling location history however, does not remove your past history.

If you would like to erase the locations Google Maps has stored for the past 30 days, go back to the Location history page. The default time period shows location history for the current day, so you may not see any plots on the map. Use the pull-down menu below the calendar on the left to show your history, up to 30 days.

If you choose a time period in which Google Maps has tracked your location, you will see the points where you have been on the map. Below the calendar, you will see options to delete your history from the time period you have chosen or to delete all history.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
I double checked my tablet by going to your link. It said "your location history is off, and only you can see it.

Good to go.

Summerthyme
 

Satanta

Stone Cold Crazy
_______________
Problem with tracking me is I often do not remember to bring my phone unless I am going to someones place and might need directions once in the AO. Otherwise it is one big red dot at my house and maybe to the local store. Good luck trying to figure me out by my computer browsing because I research a lot of things that have no connection to one-another and may only be a passing interest along with random searches of gibberish for gits and shiggles.
 
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