Daily Mail

Use of our data, should we ‘unfriend’ Facebook?

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media from being sold on would be to end anonymity. It should be obligatory for everyone posting a message to give their name, address and phone number.

VALERIE CREWS, Beckenham, Kent. FOR the state to function, control of informatio­n and a gullible population is vital. The hysteria over personal informatio­n is hypocritic­al. The individual is perfectly capable of rational decision-making. It is offensive that anyone should censor and control access to informatio­n. Privacy is an abstract concept, owing more to the desire to conceal misdemeano­rs, peccadillo­s and illegaliti­es. A. FLOYD, Tingewick, Bucks.

IF FACEBOOK insists on storing our personal data, including friends’ birthdays, it would be helpful if it sent out greeting cards for me.

LIBBY HARDING, Leeming, N. Yorks. WHEN I signed up with Facebook after it first started, I was inundated with messages from people I hadn’t spoken to for decades. But there was a reason I had not kept in touch with them, and I soon decided to press the delete button and extricated myself from this toxic, gossipy rubbish. People need to get a real life and get off Facebook. ISOBEL BROOKFIELD,

Preston, Lancs.

I DON’T do Facebook — I don’t see the need to tell anyone where I am or what I am doing. Facebook’s earnings have grown by using subscriber­s’ data, so why isn’t it paying people for it? To get the authoritie­s off Facebook’s back, it should be prepared to sign a contract with its users to pay for their data and provide an invoice.

J. NORRIS, Warfield, Berks. I HAVE no problem relying on the internet for news. I believe Trump and Putin were elected democratic­ally, Brexit was voted for by the uneducated masses, the U.S. did not land a man on the Moon and Hitler is alive and well.

ADRIAN WALTON, Warrington, Cheshire.

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