zuckerberg – -Translation – Keybot Dictionary

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  The Formation of Love  
The Week

Facebook offers a new service. You can now use Facebook to anonymously log in to a third party website. That is incredibly convenient, and great news for online privacy. Or is it? Facebook still knows exactly what you're up to. The sites in question might only get the confirmation that you exist on Facebook, but you hand over the keys of your online existence to a company that has showed time and time again it cannot be trusted to abuse it. So if you see a button 'log in to Facebook', what do you do? Do you choose to use the convenient route? Or do you look for that hidden option to log in without Facebook?

The Week

Facebook offers a new service. You can now use Facebook to anonymously log in to a third party website. That is incredibly convenient, and great news for online privacy. Or is it? Facebook still knows exactly what you're up to. The sites in question might only get the confirmation that you exist on Facebook, but you hand over the keys of your online existence to a company that has showed time and time again it cannot be trusted to abuse it. So if you see a button 'log in to Facebook', what do you do? Do you choose to use the convenient route? Or do you look for that hidden option to log in without Facebook?

  The Formation of Love  
The Huffington Post

Facebook announced some changes in the way it uses data on its users to increase the revenue of their ad platform. People will apparently click more often on ads that were selected if you take into account the websites they visited and the apps they used. That means that Facebook will now actively build your profile by spying on your every move online, if they can. And they can to a large degree. Forntunately there are still some pockets on the web that do not inform Facebook of who comes to visit. Like Respect My Privacy. Well, it's a start.

The Huffington Post

Facebook announced some changes in the way it uses data on its users to increase the revenue of their ad platform. People will apparently click more often on ads that were selected if you take into account the websites they visited and the apps they used. That means that Facebook will now actively build your profile by spying on your every move online, if they can. And they can to a large degree. Forntunately there are still some pockets on the web that do not inform Facebook of who comes to visit. Like Respect My Privacy. Well, it's a start.