The Chronicle

The file Facebook has on you

- NICK WHIGHAM @NWWHIGHAM

IT WAS the first day of pre-school. After my mum leaned down and gave me one final bear hug, I was off to start my education as I casually waved her away without looking at her –clearly she was cramping my style.

I don’t remember this seminal moment, but I happened to stumble upon the footage this week by complete happenstan­ce.

The video is of a TV screen playing an old VHS tape and appears to be taken on a camera phone. My guess is my younger sister found the tape and filmed the video to send to me.

But maybe I should just ask Facebook, because that’s where I found it – in the huge file containing my extensive Facebook history the company keeps on me.

Since the moment I, and everyone else signed up, the social media service has been collecting and keeping everything – I seriously mean everything – we have ever done on the site. All the conversati­ons, videos, pictures and documents we have shared or have had sent to us are all held on a server somewhere with space specially dedicated to each of us.

I downloaded the cache (it’s very easy to do) to check out everything Mark Zuckerberg had on file about me from over the years.

It included scanned copies of lease forms from a previous rental property I must’ve sent to my buddies over Messenger, my current tenant ledger report, an old monthly billing statement for my home broadband, screen shots of banking transfers and seemingly endless web pages of all the banal conversati­ons I have ever had on the platform.

It’s one thing to know Facebook holds all this data (and much more) on you but it’s another thing to trawl through it and find things even you’d forgotten about yourself.

It’s an odd feeling to think that, in some ways, Facebook knows you better than you know yourself.

Looking through the 500MB zip file you can see your “Ads History” which stores what ads you’ve ever clicked on as well as all the advertiser­s who Facebook has shared your contact informatio­n with.

It has facial recognitio­n data (Facebook has 105 examples of what I look like), exhaustive photo metadata including your location and the time the photo was taken and data about every time you logged onto the site such as the IP address, location, browser and device used.

My file also contained the names and numbers for everyone in my iPhone’s contact list – and yours will too.

Facebook not only knows everything you’ve ever done on its platform but via cookies it leaves in your web browser it also tracks you wherever you go on the internet – even if you don’t use Facebook.

I, like many others, opened my Facebook account just over a decade ago. Arguably it’s the first time in history that 10 years of human behaviour has been meticulous­ly gathered, stored and analysed by a company on this scale.

It’s called surveillan­ce capitalism and it’s the reason why Mark Zuckerberg is worth $92 billion.

But as the public and regulators become increasing­ly aware of just how deep Facebook’s tentacles extend into our digital lives, the company is facing increasing political headwinds.

Earlier this month, Belgium ordered Facebook to stop tracking internet users who have no accounts with the social network, or face fines of 250,000 euros a day. The ruling came amid efforts by the European Union to force Facebook to comply with stringent new privacy rules that would threaten its ability to sell advertisin­g based on targeted user informatio­n.

Now Australia has become the latest government to turn up the heat on the Zuckerberg­s of the world.

The Federal Government has ordered the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission to investigat­e the big tech giants in what chairman Rodd Sims said will be the broadest inquiry of its type in the world.

The ACCC’s inquiry will involve asking consumers how much they think the digital platforms know about them and comparing that to what is in fact being gathered.

“Some people have asserted that consumers know what’s going on and don’t care,” Mr Sims said last week.

“I think it’s absolutely crucial we find out what consumers do know and then let’s see whether they care. My suspicion is Facebook and Google have much more personal informatio­n about people than people realise.”

The inquiry will look at whether Facebook, Google or others have misused their power in commercial dealings.

How to download personal data On the desktop Facebook page, click the arrow top right and select “Settings”.

Under General, click “Download a copy of your Facebook data” It takes about 10 minutes for Facebook to retrieve the file and you’ll get an email and notificati­on when it’s ready to download.

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