The Borneo Post

#DeleteFace­book? Privacy proves hard to protect online

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FRANKFURT: Anyone tempted to # DeleteFace­book after the personal data of millions of users fell into the hands of a political consultanc­y is still likely to be monitored by the social network, which tracks nearly 30 per cent of global website traffic.

Google, in various guises, shadows 64 per cent of all web-browsing worldwide, a recent study of 200,000 German users by Cliqz, using its anti-tracking product Ghostery, said.

Neither Facebook nor Google responded to emails asking whether they viewed the Cliqz research as representa­tive.

A larger study of web trackers by researcher­s at Princeton University in 2016 produced similar results, with Google Analytics and other Google trackers taking the top five places, followed by Facebook.

Cliqz, majority owned by German publisher Hubert Burda Media and backed by Mozilla, creator of the Firefox browser, is one of several startups that promises to protect personal data.

“We prevent companies like this from spying on you,” chief executive Marc Al-Hames told Reuters.

From private browsers like Cliqz to anti-trackers and ad blockers, such firms seek to shield users from intrusion. Mainstream providers in Europe are also trying to differenti­ate themselves by stressing privacy.

“Every time there is a scandal like this at the US companies it boosts our business,” Ralph Dommermuth, founder and CEO of Germany’s United Internet, told Reuters.

The company offers encrypted email services, hosted in Germany under its strict privacy laws, and does not sell users’ data.

United Internet and others recently formed a ‘Login Alliance’ offering a single, secure way for their 50 million users to give consent in compliance with new European Union privacy rules that enter into force in May.

That contrasts with rampant use in the past of Facebook Login by companies to tap personal data.

Privacy advocates have warned for years that Facebook’s terms of use left it open to data harvesting.

Psychologi­st Aleksandr Kogan collected data on 50 million Facebook by creating a personalit­y quiz taken by a few hundred thousand people. In consenting to its terms, they let the app collect informatio­n on their Facebook ‘friends’ - without their knowledge or consent.

The US academic passed that data to Cambridge Analytica, which applied data science and psychograp­hic profiling to back Donald Trump’s election campaign – violating Facebook’s rules.

“It’s the volcano that was going to erupt at some point - we just didn’t know when,” Ben Williams, director of communicat­ions and operations at Germany-based Adblock Plus, said.

AdBlock Plus has 100 million users seeking protection from ads such as auto-play videos. It is not a privacy product as such, although users can tweak settings to increase protection.

Most people do not mind normal search advertisin­g, but object to intrusive third-party ads, Williams said.

The Facebook leak shows that the data should never have been collected, Cliqz’s Al-Hames said:

“We should all be outraged but nobody should be surprised. Everybody who has data will eventually lose that data.” — Reuters

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