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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

UzziAndHerDogs

UzziAndHerDogs Report 3 Dec 2012 19:42

So glad I don´t understand phone apps (or have a phone that can do them) Mind like Muffy all the photo´s on my phone are of my dogs !!!

I have to say tho´the grabbing of info" has to be worrying, I am careful about my details even FB doesn´t have my real name but I do occasionally get e-mails supposedly from friends addressing me as La. Straight in the junk box.

Technology is a wonderful thing but intrusion ...but then we would all applaud the CCTV that caught a villain but we will all will complain about the same CCTV that watches our moves. *sighs* difficult ain´t it ?

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 3 Dec 2012 17:22

I think it is only those who access Facebook via mobiles Ann. I am on there, I am not worried so far.

AnnCardiff

AnnCardiff Report 3 Dec 2012 16:54

glad I've not been on there

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 3 Dec 2012 16:51

:-D :-D :-D

Muffyxx

Muffyxx Report 3 Dec 2012 16:39

They will be very bored with mine....the majority of mine are of my dogs lol x

AnninGlos

AnninGlos Report 3 Dec 2012 16:31

if you are a user of Facebook:


Facebook has been accused of a massive 'data grab' after encouraging users to allow it to automatically synchronise photos from their mobile devices to the social networks servers.
The social network from Friday began asking users of its mobile apps to activate its new Photo Sync, which will automatically upload each picture to a private album.
Whether or not users decide share the photos on their public newsfeed, Facebook itself will still have access.
That means it will be able to mine those files for their metadata, including the location where the photo was taken, as well as use its facial recognition technology to spot those pictured.
As a result, over time, Facebook will be able to build up a comprehensive database of where users have been, and with whom, from information they automatically give to the company.
Emma Carr, deputy director of civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch, said: 'This provides a stark warning about the loss of control experienced once you have installed an application to your mobile phone.
'Privacy is clearly at the very back of the Facebook's mind when creating an application that enables this kind of uploading of photographs to be easier when it, in fact, it should be made more difficult.'
The Photo Sync feature, which was launched on Friday with no public announcement from Facebook, is being promoted by a banner at the top of the news feed of its mobile applications.
Once activated it allows the most recent pictures taken on users' smart phones to be background uploaded straight to a private album on Facebook's servers, where they will sit pending approval for publication.
A Q&A on Facebook's help pages stresses that the album remains private, but experts say the social network will benefit from swathes of picture metadata that will enable it to find out unprecedented details about users' lives.
At its most basic level it could enable them to tailor advertising by location. However, combined with Facebook's facial recognition technology it could also automatically find out who users have been socialising with and where.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2242255/Facebook-accused-massive-data-grab-new-service-automatically-uploads-phone-pictures.html#ixzz2E0UlUOVq