Facebook just announced changes to some of those data - sharing APIs to better ensure that agreeing to share your own data won't let those outside companies collect
data about your friends without their permission.
The card contains
data about the friend's character, which you can then take into a single player mode and either control yourself or have as a partner!
If CA and SCL had tech that was able to collect all your data, and
data about your friends, then that's because how the Facebook apps game worked.
But that permission also gave Kogan access to
data about the friend networks of these 270,000 people, which amounted to tens of millions of Facebook users, according to the Times.
That means that while a single user may have agreed to hand over their data, developers could also access
some data about their friends.
When a person would sign up for the app through Facebook, it could collect
data about their friends — a practice that Facebook allowed at the time.
The application gathered their data and
data about their friends, and then Kogan passed the data to Cambridge Analytica, according to both Cambridge Analytica and Facebook.
We collected the same
data about their friends whose security settings allowed for their friends to share their data through apps.
In addition to the 270,000 users who participated in the quiz itself, the application was also able to gather
data about the friends of those users — something that was allowed by Facebook's application program interface (API) at the time.
«The good news is that the most important actions to prevent this from happening again today we have already taken years ago,» Zuckerberg claimed, referring to changes made to Facebook's developer platform policies in 2014 that stopped app developers from gathering
data about the friends of people using their apps.
Not exact matches
«
Friends don't let friends build data centers,» said Charles Phillips, chief executive officer of Infor, a business software maker, about two yea
Friends don't let
friends build data centers,» said Charles Phillips, chief executive officer of Infor, a business software maker, about two yea
friends build
data centers,» said Charles Phillips, chief executive officer of Infor, a business software maker,
about two years ago.
Facebook is trying fix its broken
data privacy after a developer named Dr. Aleksandr Kogan used the platform to administer a personality test app that collected
data about participants and their
friends.
Facebook was hit with one of its biggest scandals ever when multiple outlets reported that a researcher's app pulled personal information
about 270,000 users and 50 million of their
friends, then passed that
data to Cambridge Analytica.
While many people thought they were downloading a fairly harmless personality quiz app, Cambridge Analytica was using Facebook's API to gather
data about the users of this app, but also the
friends of the users.
Generally, apps aren't placing their fine print front and center when we're using them, nor are they priming us to think too hard
about what the long - term or large - scale ramifications of providing our
data — and in this case, our
friends»
data — could be.
This week the New York Times and The Observer of London reported that a researcher's app had pulled personal information on
about 270,000 Facebook users and 50 million of their
friends back in 2015, and then passed that
data haul to political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica in violation of Facebook's policies.
Most importantly, apps like Kogan's could no longer ask for
data about a person's
friends unless their
friends had also authorized the app.
Cambridge academic researcher Aleksandr Kogan designed the personality quiz app, and although only
about 270,000 people tried it out, the app's settings allowed it to access
friends»
data, affecting millions more.
It may be unfair to single him out, but I have become familiar with his work mainly because several of my investment and academic
friends in Australia seem to delight in sending me his articles and making witty comments
about how economists can take
data that confounds their forecasts and use it to confirm their analysis.
Collecting user
data before 2015 was actually something the company encouraged, under the banner of increased utility for Facebook users — so that calendars could bring in information
about the birthdays of
friends, for instance.
The team could supply people with information
about their
friends based on
data it had independently gathered.
Its current app platform prevents apps from accessing formerly - available
data about a user's
friends.
About 270,000 users downloaded the app, but Facebook's policies then allowed developers to also scrape
data from those users»
friends, so GSR ended up collecting information from millions of accounts.
Developers can no longer access the
data about a user's
friends unless the
friends also subscribe to that developer's services.
«In addition to downloading Facebook
data about app users, the app sought and collected
data about the Facebook
friends of its users.»
Mark Zuckerberg replied; «Before 2014 when we announced the change, someone could sign into an app and share some of their
data but could also share basic information
about their
friends and in 2014 the major change was we said «now you're not going to be able to share any information
about your
friends.»
But two former FTC officials said that Facebook's allowing the psychologist to take so much
data about a person's
friends could constitute a violation of a 2011 consent decree with the agency.
The question of whether Cambridge used the
data from the 270,000 people to mine information
about their
friends could constitute a breach of its agreement, said Siva Vaidhyanathan, a professor of media studies at the University of Virginia.
But in the years in between, developers of everything from dating apps to voter - outreach tools used by the Obama campaign, capitalized on Facebook's rules to extract massive amounts of
data about Facebook users and their
friends.
Mr. CANADA: Well, you know, it's sort of interesting, because I have some of my Republican
friends who love to tout the fact that I am
about results, and I want to use
data, and I'm prepared to fire teachers or principals or anyone who can't really deliver for children, right?
It's really pretty simple:
data shows Facebook that users feel like their newsfeeds are overrun with impersonal content from pages instead of content from their
friends and family, and they aren't happy
about that.
«When the review into LIBOR is looked at, it will of course include this market [the oil market], and will aim to publish conclusions by the end of September... as a result of this debate, and the arguments from my Hon.
Friend [Robert Halfon], I will also write to the FSA
about concerns raised today... It is absolutely right that we enhance transparency in the oil and commodity markets... It is clear from the
data that there is a considerable time - lag involved [between oil prices and petrol prices].
It gave Kogan access to demographic information
about Facebook users — including the names of users, their «likes,»
friend lists and other
data.
The demands came in response to news reports Saturday
about how the firm, Cambridge Analytica, used a feature once available to Facebook app developers to collect information on 270,000 people and, in the process, gain access to
data on tens of millions of their Facebook «
friends» — few, if any, of whom had given explicit permission for this sharing.
But the firm was able to obtain personal information
about their
friends, who likely had no knowledge that their
data was being collected.
Whistleblowers in recent days contend that Cambridge Analytica collected information
about users and their
friends under a since - ceased policy governing third - party apps on Facebook — then kept that
data even after Facebook asked that it be deleted.
In other words, each of the 270,000 people who were paid to install the app also gave up a significant amount of
data about their Facebook
friends as well — meaning that from the original 270,000 subjects, Kogan managed to obtain as many as 50 million profiles, including information like locations, job and educational histories, and pages liked.
Children could share intimate details
about their lives with their new
friend only for that conversation to be recorded and sent to a
data centre.
Christakis study drew on a subset of those
data, a social network that includes
about 5000 individuals and more than 7000 of their parents, siblings, spouses, and
friends.
As an astronomer who works on Spitzer
data nearly everyday, I love to tell
friends and family
about the research contributions of different types of space telescopes, from X-ray to infrared.
I think it's important to analyze the
data — if on the first date your guy (or gal) talks
about some time consuming passion in their life such as a startup business, a planned bicycle trip across Europe, renovating a house, etc. there's a pretty good chance that he's going to be too busy for anything other than a «
friends with benefits» type of scenario.
«People talk a lot
about big
data these days, but the biggest area of opportunity is incorporating social elements into that through user inputs such as
friend recommendations,» Kang said.
But rest assured that it's happening: ask any of your
friends or coworkers who use the app and they can regale you with stories
about their Tinder dates, both good and bad, and Tinder's Twitter account even claims that the app is leading to a «sh*t ton» of marriages (although hard
data is thin on the ground here).
Two met sets their film two states hello my
friend today ny personal experience
about 24 client think not bad but don excellent internet
data because is.
However, as Barley goes
about his business of learning all the fine
data points his secret agent
friends want to know, he finds himself starting to fall in love with Katya.
Of course, anyone who has poked a bit deeper or thought a bit longer
about it understands that people programming Facebook aren't sitting around wondering how to foster more enduring relationships for little Johnny, Janey and their
friends, but rather how to monetize their social graphs — the trail of
data the site is busy accumulating
about Johnny and Janey every second of the day and night.
In Prekindergarten we capitalize on opportunities to mathematize play and daily routines, such as counting days of school, sorting shapes, describing and extending patterns with toys, comparing lengths of items around the room, or collecting and displaying
data about the weather and our
friends.
I have a specific audience in mind — people who care deeply
about racial justice but who, for any number of reasons, do not yet appreciate the magnitude faced by communities of color as a result of mass incarceration... (and) those who have been struggling to persuade their
friends, neighbors, relatives, teachers, co-workers, or political representatives... but who have lacked the facts and
data to back up their claims.
I don't have
data on English literacy, or the number of English readers, though our
friends at Flipkart tell me
about 80 % of their book sales are English language books.
What this preliminary
data tells us is that the common assumptions are correct — most use MS Word to write, learn
about self - publishing from
friends and family, and primarily publish for their own reasons and not to become a rich and famous author.