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Do You Suddenly Need To Delete Your Facebook App?

  • Nishadil
  • January 08, 2024
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  • 8 minutes read
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Do You Suddenly Need To Delete Your Facebook App?

If you have Facebook’s mobile app on your phone, then a stark new warning issued this week is aimed at you. But there’s a much more worrying issue this has also exposed, one that should make Facebook’s two billion users seriously consider whether they should be using the app at all. Serious new warning issued for 2 billion Facebook Mobile App users as new update goes live 1/8 update below, this article was originally published on 1/6 The latest update to Facebook's app has been described on X as “ a huge deal that demands press attention ” and “ the creepiest thing you’ll read all day .” And so you might think this is enough to have you switch off.

But this “creepy” change can be easily switched off—and you should do exactly that. The technology lurking behind it is much harder to disable, though, and much creepier. Let’s start with that update. Facebook’s new “Link History” saves a list of the websites you visit through its in app browser, so that you can return to any site at any time.

When your app updates, you will see the option to disable Link History, forfeiting the convenience of “your Facebook browsing activity all stored in one place,” but also avoiding Facebook’s inevitable sidebar that “we may use link history information from Facebook’s Mobile Browser to improve your ads across Meta.” Facebook Mobile App Link History This “standard feature for most browsing experiences,” a Facebook spokesperson told The Drum , “makes it easier for people to revisit links they’ve clicked on in the past and can improve the quality of the ads they see.” And Facebook also points to the apparent transparency and user control.

There’s certainly a balance here. Facebook—alongside Google—remains the world’s most valuable data harvesting machine. But while Google has just made headlines finally delivering on its promise to kill the hidden tracking cookies in Chrome, Facebook appears to be doing the opposite, with this seemingly new form of tracking that is sold as a user convenience, but which is used to target ads.

The update is certainly a sensible sop to regulators that privacy controls are being deployed, but on the other hand it provides an opportunity for Facebook to solicit user permission for a tracking technology. And millions of users will opt in. The adversarial Facebook headlines in recent years as Apple has chipped away at its business model with Ad Tracking Transparency have now faded.

And the tracking industry is clearly well set on new ways to restore some of what was lost. While Link History can be dismissed as just the latest form of tracking dressed as convenience which can be disabled, there’s a much more serious issue hidden behind it. In app browsers are a poorly understood threat to user privacy and security.

The browser built into Facebook’s mobile app is described as “one of the most popular and under reported segments of browsers on the web.” The problem is that when you use the in app browser built into Facebook’s app—or Instagram’s or TikTok’s or any others, you bypass all the browser privacy and security advances made in recent years, including Google’s latest cooking killing.

As one former Google engineer warned last year, Facebook “renders all third party links and ads within their app using a custom in app browser... with the host app being able to track every single interaction with external websites, from all form inputs like passwords and addresses, to every tap.” If you are using Facebook on Apple’s Safari, for example, and click an external link, your privacy is being safeguarded by Apple’s settings.

There are limits on what Facebook—or other websites—can do as regards harvesting your data and tracking your activity. But if the browser is Facebook’s, then they technically have free rein, albeit Meta assures that it respects the app privacy settings on your phone. The issue for Facebook isn’t that Link History is now making waves, as outlets push out warnings to change settings.

The issue is that this shines a light on the risks with apps from organizations that track users as part of their business models. Facebook is a tracking business. You’re its product, not its customer. Its customers are the companies buying access to you in the form of ads targeted to deliver the best return on investment possible.

Link History has been described as the latest “ privacy nightmare ” for Facebook, but it’s just the tip of an iceberg that has now floated into view. I asked Facebook what restrictions is applies to data harvesting when a user disables Link History as regards background in app browser tracking.

They didn’t answer that question, but emphasized instead that “Link History is not on by default—people must enable this feature, and they can change their Link History settings in Browser Settings at any time.” 1/8 update: Deleting Facebook’s mobile app is one thing, but you can clearly go much further and delete your account entirely if you want to.

And just after the Link History update began to make privacy and user tracking waves with media outlets around the world, a U.K. broadcaster pushed its marketing for a documentary that airs this week by asking just that: “Should you delete Facebook?” “For more than a decade,” Sky News reports, “university professor and privacy expert Dr Michael Zimmer has been recording ‘every single thing’ the Facebook founder says in public, in an archive known as ‘The Zuckerberg Files’.” The documentary, “ Zuckerberg: King Of The Metaverse, ” covers material captured back to 2004, which includes the early halcyon days when Facebook seemed to be driving the information democratization of some of the more locked down parts of the world, with the availability of news across Asia, Africa and the Middle East transformed.

"Here were all these people in countries like Syria, Tunisia and Egypt who could create their own alternative media,” former company exec Richard Allan explained, “in opposition to a state that controlled the media to within an inch of its life and allowed them no space... They created the revolution, not us.

We weren't there on the barricades but we had given them a media tool." But then along came Trump and Brexit and Cambridge Analytica. "Overnight,” recalled Facebook’s former public policy director. “we went from everything we touched turned to gold, to everything we touched turned to dust...

When I first joined, movies were being made (about Facebook), the founder was on the cover of Time Magazine, you're overthrowing dictators—seven years later you're being told you destroyed democracy." Just as with Link History, the answer to this overarching question is a balance—Facebook has been a force for good in opening up the availability of information, albeit there have been huge issues.

"I think overall he's had a good impact," one privacy expert told the show, "I think he—and the way he's run his organizations—has been naive and miscalculating in terms of the broader impact that they have on the world. We can look at examples, especially in developing countries, where his platforms have clearly been used and misused in ways that have harmed people." While there's certainly some reality to the here to villain soap operate that Facebook has endured, the stark truth is that if you create a business model entirely founded on harvesting and monetizing the personal data of billions of citizens, using a vast ecosystem of hidden trackers, then something at some point is going to come unstuck.

And unstuck is definitely what Facebook became. Ironically, Facebook’s seeming excesses when it comes to data collection have helped change the landscape, with Apple creating a marketing drive as the antithesis to this tracking nightmare. It’s that dynamic which has driven Google—a richer data miner than even Facebook—into making changes and which has helped to educate users as to the reason “there’s an app for that” has come to dominate the way we run our lives.

In contrast to Google, which has a bigger influence on the data driven advertising ecosystem than Facebook, Zuckerberg’s empire has struggled much more in diversifying to create a brand that delivers value to its users beyond the content spawned by social media algorithms. The jury remains firmly out as regards the world changing potential of his Metaverse.

As to what you should do about all this today, as regards your own Facebook usage, while there is a constant stream of commentary on the privacy differentiators between Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge, et al, you undo all those protections when you use an in app browser. Cross site tracking doesn't apply within an ecosystem.

And secure communications firm Proton even warns that users “don’t use in app web browsers if you care about keeping your passwords private.” Facebook iOS App "Data Used to Track You" and "Data Linked to You" Taking Facebook’s example, above is the privacy report (courtesy of Apple’s App Store) on the data harvested either to track you across other apps and sites, or which is linked to you and can be used to build a profile to target you with ads and hone your value as a product to be sold to advertisers.

When you look at this data harvesting, you might want to ask if the convenience of an in app browser is worth the risk. You should certainly think about the sites you visit and the information you provide as you do so, if you don’t want to go as far as avoiding or deleting the apps..