{"id":2977,"date":"2010-10-19T12:06:20","date_gmt":"2010-10-19T11:06:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/?p=2977"},"modified":"2015-09-09T19:37:25","modified_gmt":"2015-09-09T11:37:25","slug":"facebook-apps-leaking-personal-data-to-third-parties","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/2010\/10\/facebook-apps-leaking-personal-data-to-third-parties\/","title":{"rendered":"Facebook Apps Leaking Personal Data To Third Parties"},"content":{"rendered":"

Less than a week after our story about Facebook Introducing OTP (One-time Password) Functionality<\/a> to make the site more secure, their dubious privacy standards have hit the news again.<\/p>\n

Facebook privacy<\/a> has been in the news numerous times and it’s a subject we’ve also covered many times, with the sheer mass of users on the site the amount of data (especially personal data) is phenomenal.<\/p>\n

The latest buzz is that many of the most popular 3rd party apps (mostly games like Farmville and Texas HoldEm Poker) are leaking the unique Facebook<\/a> ID that enables tracking of an individual Facebook user.<\/p>\n

A number of Facebook apps have been providing advertisers with information that make social networking users easily identifiable, according to an investigation by the Wall Street Journal.<\/p>\n

All 10 of Facebook’s most popular apps, including Farmville and Texas HoldEm Poker, are among those leaking the unique ‘Facebook ID’ number to outside firms. Every Facebook number is individual and assigned to every profile. Searching for the number will provide access to the Facebook user’s profile and anyone can view the information a user has chosen to share with ‘everyone’. This can include their name, date of birth and even photos.<\/p>\n

Farmville, which has 59 million users, also passes this information about a user’s friends. The WSJ said at least 25 firms were being sent the Facebook IDs, which they were using to build profiles of web users, and in some cases, even track their web browsing. It’s not known if the developers knew their apps were leaking data.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

It’s become a big issue because WSJ reported on it – Facebook in Privacy Breach<\/a>, it seems that with the data that the apps leak + some good old data mining advertising and marketing companies can build fairly comprehensive databases about individuals on the Internet.<\/p>\n

Not that this is a new problem for anyone who has followed the issues Facebook has been dealing with and in part making worse themselves with lax default privacy<\/a> settings. It’s a contradiction really because for a service like Facebook the more data they can collect the more valuable they are and on the flip-side everyone and his dog is so worried about privacy…but they still use Facebook. <\/p>\n