I've been saying for a long time our smart phones and possibly other devices in our homes are eavesdropping. My wife and I had noticed that we could talk about a subject in the privacy of our home and miraculously start getting fed advertisements on line about what we talked about in private. Some people I've told this to have suggested I'm paranoid and should break out the tin foil hat, but it's happened far too many times to be coincidental. Well, check out this story.
The people at Facebook don't even deny eavesdropping.
This story is why you don't want crap like the Facebook app on your phone. Putting their app on your phone gives them permission to do this sh*t when you tap "I agree". Of course, Facebook isn't the only one and your phone isn't the only smart device in most people's homes ... or cars anymore. Of course, they say they don't use "audio" in this manner, but I know they do. It's happened too many times to deny. They might not be "listening" in the traditional sense, but the app is and I guarantee you they could if they wanted to - if you have a working and enabled mic.Facebook uses smartphones to listen to what people say, professor suggests
Facebook could be listening in on people’s conversations all of the time, an expert has claimed. The app might be using people’s phones to gather data on what they are talking about, it has been claimed.
Facebook says that its app does listen to what’s happening around it, but only as a way of seeing what people are listening to or watching and suggesting that they post about it.
The feature has been available for a couple of years, but recent warnings from Kelli Burns, mass communication professor at the University of South Florida, have drawn attention to it. Professor Burns has said that the tool appears to be using the audio it gathers not simply to help out users, but might be doing so to listen in to discussions and serve them with relevant advertising. She says that to test the feature, she discussed certain topics around the phone and then found that the site appeared to show relevant ads.
Though Professor Burns said she was not convinced that Facebook is listening in on conversations – it may have been that she was searching for the same things that she chose to discuss around the phone – but she said that it wouldn't be a surprising move from the site. The claim chimes with anecdotal reports online that the site appears to show ads for things that people have mentioned in passing.
Facebook said that it does listen to audio and collect information from users – but that the two aren't combined, and that sounds heard around people aren't used to decide what appears in the app. “Facebook does not use microphone audio to inform advertising or News Feed stories in any way," a spokesperson told The Independent. "Businesses are able to serve relevant ads based on people’s interests and other demographic information, but not through audio collection.”
At the moment, the feature is only available in the US. When it was first introduced, in 2014, Facebook responded to controversy by arguing that the phone isn’t “always listening” and that it never stores the “raw audio” when it is listening.
Facebook says explicitly on its help pages that it doesn’t record conversations, but that it does use the audio to identify what is happening around the phone. The site promotes the feature as an easy way of identifying what you are listening to or watching, to make it easier and quicker to post about whatever’s going on.
The rest of the story is here: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style ... 57526.html
I, for one, don't put stuff like Facebook on my phone or turn on GPS tracking so they can "better serve me". I ain't putting a device on my car to record my driving habits so an insurance company can save me money either. Yes, I know it's impossible to not leave a digital footprint this day and age but at least I have the satisfaction of knowing I didn't help them out.