Is Facebook eavesdropping on us?
Loading...
After rumors surfaced that Facebook using smartphone microphones, the social media platform hurried to put those fears to rest.
The idea arose when Kelli Burns, a mass communication professor at the University of South Florida, that Facebook may be using recorded user conversations in order to better target advertising.
Users were alarmed, but Facebook says that the rumors simply are not true.
鈥淲e only access your microphone if you have given our app permission,鈥 Facebook on Thursday, 鈥渁nd if you are actively using a specific feature that requires audio.鈥
Dr. Burns says she tested her theory by discussing certain topics near the phone. Facebook soon showed advertising for items or services related to her conversations, she says.
Despite her findings, Burns did tell the Independent that she is not certain that the site is eavesdropping. Facebook may simply mine data from her web searches to target advertising, she said, but using audio data would not be out of character for the site.
When Facebook first introduced apps that could access phone microphones in 2014, it faced user concerns that the social media platform would be 鈥渁lways listening.鈥
Both in 2014 and this week, Facebook maintained that it did not listen to raw data, and that it only collects any sort of microphone data if users have given the app permission.
Phones do 鈥渓isten鈥 to what is going on around the phone, making it easier to post about a TV show or movie that users are watching, Tech Times reports. Users can do away with this feature simply by turning off the microphone in their phone鈥檚 settings.
Other companies have faced similar data collection concerns. Just last month, chief economic researcher at Uber, Keith Chen, discussed the information Uber gathers on its users.
Uber collects a multitude of data on its users, Dr. Chen told NPR, including information about how much battery life phones have remaining 鈥 because聽Uber knows that users are more likely to accept surge prices when phone batteries are low.
Not that they would use that information, of course.
According to Chen, Uber has 鈥減rocedures鈥 in place to ensure that it isn鈥檛 using data in an intrusive way.
鈥淎nd we absolutely don't use that to kind of like push you a higher surge price,鈥 Chen said on NPR, 鈥渂ut it's an interesting kind of psychological fact of human behavior.鈥
In another case earlier this month, that the FBI 鈥渃an neither confirm nor deny鈥 that it has ever wiretapped an Amazon Echo.
Echoes are the quintessential 鈥渁lways listening鈥 device, ready to play music or look up directions for users at a word.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center filed a complaint in 2015 against Uber鈥檚 data collection, saying that changes to the app 鈥渢hreaten the privacy rights and personal safety of American consumers, ignore past bad practices of the company involving the misuse of location data, pose a direct risk of consumer harm, and constitute an unfair and deceptive trade practice subject to investigation by the Federal Trade Commission.鈥