Posted on 09/24/2014 9:16:57 PM PDT by null and void
Shoving an unneeded messenger app down the throat of your entire user base is a guaranteed way to upset people and leave them feeling disillusioned, asking questions like why do I suddenly need this? While theres no indication that Facebook harbors malicious intent, the company is collecting enormous amounts of data about the users of its applications, states iOS forensics specialist and security researcher Jonathan Zdziarski. This should come as no surprise considering that most mobile apps run some sort of analytics on user behavior, although Facebooks apps ─ according to Zdziarski have more spyware type code in it than in products specifically intended for surveillance.
After reverse-engineering the Facebook Messengers iOS binary, Zdziarski discovered that the messenger app records everything a user does within the app, including but not limited to the words typed, the users location, the time spent in the Messenger app compared to how long it runs in the background, and even how often a device is held in portrait versus landscape orientation. Some of these parameters are trifling, but what alarmed Zdziarski most of all, was the presence of private APIs capable of pulling out ones Wi-FI SSID (Service Set Identifier). SSID is another name for wireless local area network, meaning that Facebook Messenger is able to determine which wireless networks you connect too.
Zdiarski also uncovered several functions with cryptic names like globalProviderMapData and isHeadPublisher surrounded by a string issuing the following dire warning: [DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED]. A short while later, hacker-turned-facebook-employee Grant Paul, tweeted that the string is an inside joke and that he was responsible for writing it. Joke or not, the notion of such a string remaining in the code following the softwares Q/A inspection is a bit odd to say the least.
Zdziarski tells Motherboard that a couple hours of tinkering around isnt going to provide any meaningful conclusions but there is a lot of code that suggests Facebook is running analytics on nearly everything it possibly can monitor on your device. In other words, take these findings with a grain-of-salt.
Recall that Facebook faced similar backlash just last month when its newly released Messenger app asked Android-users for permission to access their phones camera, microphone, text messages, and saved content. The company explained that these permissions do not necessarily reflect the way the Messenger app and other apps use them, but included such language as part of Androids strict policy on permissions. By contrast, iPhone users are only prompted to grant permission on a per function basis as they are encountered during normal phone use. For example, if a user never attempts to make a Facebook Messenger voice-call, the app will never ask for permission to use the phones microphone.
The screenshots below demonstrate the permissions you may or may not be granting Facebook by installing its applications on an Android device. It may be argued that weve grown a bit paranoid amidst Edward Snowdens massive NSA leak, yet in the realm of legal language, not necessarily leaves a lot of wiggle room for what can and cannot be done.
Pro tip: Facebook and its messaging service may be alternatively accessed through the browser on your smartphone and does not require the installation of any new application or software. If you must use its service, I recommend you do it there, but be wary of what you share.
Considering the companys stance on cannibalizing all the content posted through its web service, it should come as no surprise if installing the Facebook and Facebook Messenger app also permits Facebook the right to possessive your information. A quick look at Facebooks Statement of Rights and Responsibilities reveals the following:
For content that is covered by intellectual property rights, like photos and videos (IP content), you specifically give us the following permission, subject to your privacy and application settings: you grant us a non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide license to use any IP content that you post on or in connection with Facebook (IP License). This IP License ends when you delete your IP content or your account unless your content has been shared with others, and they have not deleted it.
Translation: Anything you post belongs to Facebook, including ideas. Facebook claims the IP license ends upon content deletion; however, the 2nd clause the Statement of Rights dictates that deleted content may not actually be getting deleted.
When you delete IP content, it is deleted in a manner similar to emptying the recycle bin on a computer. However, you understand that removed content may persist in backup copies for a reasonable period of time (but will not be available to others).
Food for thought
Going a bit deeper down the rabbit hole, I was once conversing with a friend through Facebook Messenger app, and a tag labeled business idea misspelled as business ideea appeared beneath our names, as if the subject of our conversation was hastily being documented and the observer mistyped a word. Oddly enough, the label was only visible on As end, who was using a laptop.
Have you ever encountered any suspicious surveillance? Share your experiences below.
Facebook is a goldmine for potential rapists and the IRS
Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping!
To get onto The Nut-job Conspiracy Theory Ping List you must threaten to report me to the Mods if I don't add you to the list...
If you like your facebook you can keep your facebook, but don’t ever even try to convince me it’s worth the intrusion into what little privacy I have left being on the internet.
Facebook? What’s that?
do not have
That is a remarkable sentence. Whatever you post to Facebook, Facebook can sell or use as it pleases without paying you one cent for your intellectual property.
My better half says I should sign-up, and I say ‘Why?’
FR is FB, but w/o BS.
;)
Wanna bet ? !
Nope.
I jes' quote 'em, I don't necessarily believe 'em...
Redundant.
Ain't that the truth.
I left Farce book a few months ago.
Good Riddance!
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