> According to Facebook's Statement of Rights and Responsibilities:
> You give us permission to use your name, profile picture, content, and information in connection with commercial, sponsored, or related content (such as a brand you like) served or enhanced by us. This means, for example, that you permit a business or other entity to pay us to display your name and/or profile picture with your content or information, without any compensation to you. If you have selected a specific audience for your content or information, we will respect your choice when we use it.
I understand that I give them permission. That's partly why I'm not a producer of content on those platforms, though I'll consume now and then. But I'll rarely produce text (other than usually a happy birthday now and then), and I'll never produce photos.
But what about the people in my photographs, whether on purpose or not? Did they give permission? That's the part that Meta doesn't really want to address.
slumberlust 15 hours ago [-]
If car mfgs can engross passengers in ToS they may never see; I'd guess yes. At least until someone challenges it.
smalltorch 23 hours ago [-]
Those are incredible terms that no one read.
Groxx 20 hours ago [-]
Almost literally every single social media site in the past ~15+ years has had those exact terms in it.
Everything you upload, almost everywhere, can be used by the site owners to do whatever they like for their own purposes (reselling is somewhat often excluded / non-transferrable). There are a handful of exceptions, but they're very much exceptions, not the normal rule.
greggsy 19 hours ago [-]
HN maybe?
victorbjorklund 18 hours ago [-]
HN terms: "By uploading any User Content you hereby grant and will grant Y Combinator and its affiliated companies a nonexclusive, worldwide, royalty free, fully paid up, transferable, sublicensable, perpetual, irrevocable license to copy, display, upload, perform, distribute, store, modify and otherwise use your User Content for any Y Combinator-related purpose in any form, medium or technology now known or later developed."
digitaltrees 17 hours ago [-]
Sites need to include this language to protect themselves from malicious law suits. But they don’t need to actually do stupid, disrespectful stuff with that power.
Remember the Zuck quote when asked why people gave him their data: “they trust me, dumb f*cks”.
When someone shows you who they are, trust them. He should be banned from having user data.
endofreach 15 hours ago [-]
> Sites need to include this language to protect themselves from malicious law suits
No, they do not. They do need to have people believe they do need to.
DANmode 18 hours ago [-]
Dude…just read them!
AlienRobot 17 hours ago [-]
Do you really expect us to read the terms of service of the service we use?!
iinnPP 17 hours ago [-]
If you want to complain afterwards, yes.
bluefirebrand 16 hours ago [-]
I would suggest that the services expect that we don't, which is why they are comfortable putting absolutely anything they want in the terms
acdha 22 hours ago [-]
I cancelled my Instagram account when they added those terms in the early 2010s. At the time it was mostly photographers reading them and closing accounts but it wasn’t exactly a secret.
alex1138 17 hours ago [-]
I get sad because people liked Insta pre-Zuckerberg. Like, it was growing. People seem to couch it in terms of "They had 12 employees. They weren't going anywhere". But they were. Zuckerberg just wanted to enlargen his war chest
I refuse to sign up for an Insta. I will not acquiesce to 'lol we're going to put a login wall on every page'
cindyllm 15 hours ago [-]
[dead]
DANmode 22 hours ago [-]
Speak for yourself.
“Few”, maybe.
satvikpendem 22 hours ago [-]
"No one" does not literally mean "not a single individual" in common English parlance, something that everyone (see what I did there?) here understands.
breezybottom 19 hours ago [-]
Yes it does. If I'm asked how many people are in the pool and I respond "no one", that means not a single individual.
satvikpendem 13 hours ago [-]
That's because you are asking for a specific count. If I am gauging the quality of some restaurant for example and someone said no one goes there, I would not assume that to mean not a single person goes there.
DANmode 19 hours ago [-]
It literally does mean that.
It figuratively does not.
You’re not going to change the meaning of two words, here…
satvikpendem 13 hours ago [-]
Literally does mean figuratively, since a few centuries ago, so no need to change the meaning of the word. Regardless, people understood what was meant, it seems only you are taking it, well, literally.
DANmode 12 hours ago [-]
> Literally does mean figuratively, since a few centuries ago
You’re a clown-horse.
satvikpendem 10 hours ago [-]
Read the HN guidelines, don't resort to insults just because you don't like the discourse.
DANmode 9 hours ago [-]
Literally doesn’t mean figuratively - anymore than “yeet” means to remove.
This isn’t discourse anymore.
(Millions of cigarette smokers can be wrong!)
smalltorch 22 hours ago [-]
I mean, I read them, but just goes to show the majority of people skipped this important reading.
If anyone actually read them it's typically a unlimited unrestricted pipe of data they can use for anything.
Espressosaurus 22 hours ago [-]
No one reads the terms and conditions. I went to a resort and read the T&C they made you sign to sign in and was told I was the only person in months who had actually done so.
And even I have mostly given up on the website T&C because most of them are so lengthy, a lot like I've given up on disabling javascript since the modern web frequently won't even render anything if you disable it.
kevin_thibedeau 20 hours ago [-]
NoScript allows most of the modern web to work with selective whitelisting.
cute_boi 22 hours ago [-]
99% of people don't read terms and condition.
DANmode 22 hours ago [-]
We’re saying the same thing.
cwillu 6 hours ago [-]
Funny, because I got a payout last year from facebook settling a class action suit about their use of my and others' likeness in their fucking sponsored stories.
rrgok 7 hours ago [-]
I give you the permission, but license cost for using my things is 30% of the revenue.
23 hours ago [-]
rootusrootus 22 hours ago [-]
> If you have selected a specific audience for your content or information, we will respect your choice when we use it.
To be fair, if they actually honor this promise, and if it means what it sounds like in plain English -- i.e. that if you only posted your photo for friends, only friends can ever see it even if FB uses it for advertising -- that is a halfway decent mitigation of the issue. Not ideal, but then again, you're not paying for FB, so what did you really expect?
fweimer 17 hours ago [-]
I think you got it backwards. Wouldn't it be way worse if they used your likeness for advertising to your friends? Compared to random people who don't know you?
microgpt 21 hours ago [-]
"respect your choice" sounds like it means something but doesn't mean something.
bryanrasmussen 20 hours ago [-]
respect your choice may mean something if a court decides.
bryanrasmussen 19 hours ago [-]
I wonder if terms and conditions vary between jurisdictions. I would guess so.
Xunjin 18 hours ago [-]
They can definitely be questioned in courts.
bryanrasmussen 16 hours ago [-]
Yes, but let us suppose I am a big company.
I have lawyers make up terms and conditions that are really great for me, but which might cause real problems in some specific jurisdiction. Do I serve two terms and conditions or just one and hope I don't get in trouble.
I think once I'm big enough and have expensive lawyers might as well craft the terms appropriate to areas.
But now gets tricky in area A I can say "We have the right to change these terms and conditions unilaterally at any time we wish and you will be bound by the new conditions"
Now someone in area A moves to area B where terms and conditions are not as great for my company, and where you are not allowed to change terms and conditions unilaterally. Maybe I change terms for A to B immediately when they move to B so I don't get problems. But now they move out of B back to A, I probably have to ask them to agree to A conditions again.
Anyway, it is funny wondering just how nefarious these companies are with the terms and conditions.
pavel_lishin 23 hours ago [-]
> If you don't want this, delete your facebook account
What? I thought I could just paste a paragraph of all-caps legalese to my profile, and it would solve this!
pbhjpbhj 22 hours ago [-]
To be fair it seems like it should be equally valid in contract law.
hmry 20 hours ago [-]
I can confirm it works exactly as well as putting "everything belongs to its original owners, no copyright intended" in your youtube video description
steve1977 23 hours ago [-]
This made me laugh and cry at the same time...
realusername 20 hours ago [-]
Both sounds kind of the same thing to me, a wall of text that nobody will read and each essentially saying "I have the right to do whatever I want"
like_any_other 19 hours ago [-]
> If you don't want this, delete your facebook account
All that will happen is this term or similar will appear in some other "contract" of adhesion. Your bank? Your motherboard's EULA? Paypal or LLM vendor terms? Your phone OS/ISP? Your car? Anywhere and everywhere where some necessity of modern life is provided by a faceless multinational corporation.
If you don't want this, organize and lobby against it politically. That's what corporations do when they want to screw us over, and it's working great for them. Is the act-as-an-isolated-mere-consumer approach working great for us?
jubilee33 20 hours ago [-]
Yes, like immediately after they were beta on unsuspecting university students. Anyone with a Facebook in 2026, ...well we can't just say they deserve it because that is definitely (no sarcasm intended) blaming the victim.
But sometimes it feels like, why does the Nigerian Prince scam keep working after 30 plus years? Do we have to sacrifice the weak and vulnerable to have any sense of freedom and creativity? I don't know honestly ...perhaps?
Meta — the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp — has a long history of abusing user trust. It has been fined billions for illegal activities like unauthorised data harvesting (Cambridge Analytica), illegal facial recognition, and mishandling children’s private information. Beyond what’s illegal, Meta is ethically notorious for emotional manipulation experiments, addictive design targeted at teenagers, rampant surveillance (even of non-users), promoting misinformation, and ignoring research that shows its products harm mental health.
Many years ago (back when Facebook still had sidebar ads), my sister was presented with a dating ad for "Hot Christian Singles" accompanied by a photo of our brother.
It was hilarious, but also mind-boggling. In what scenario would pulling in a friend's profile photo create a useful ad?
dewey 23 hours ago [-]
> In what scenario would pulling in a friend's profile photo create a useful ad?
Exactly in the scenario you just described. You still remember it and you are actively talking about it years after the fact.
fumblebee 22 hours ago [-]
wouldn't "useful ad" imply either 1) clicking through and buying the product or service, or else 2) building up a positive brand association to help increase sales later?
remembering an advert correlates but is different to it being valuable.
svachalek 21 hours ago [-]
Yeah I remember some studies showed this with overly sexy ads. They were very memorable to the audience but all they remembered was hot chicks, they couldn't recall the product.
not_a_bot_4sho 22 hours ago [-]
Sounds like the viewers were highly unlikely to have clicked through. Cost the advertiser a view but lost the conversion.
Useful ad for Facebook. They made money on it. The advertiser didn't.
theNotFractured 19 hours ago [-]
If the viewers don't click on facebook, advertisers would stop advertising on facebook.
chrz 18 hours ago [-]
but lot of clicks doesnt happen because of the content
RattlesnakeJake 22 hours ago [-]
But it didn't bring clicks to the website nor goodwill toward the company.
No one remembers who ran the ad. Even if we did, it would only be in a negative light due to a weird and off-putting advertising approach.
dewey 22 hours ago [-]
Don't get hung up on this specific example of the dating ad.
There's a difference between awareness campaigns and click / conversion campaigns and if there's some ads for a garden chair and your friend is sitting on it you'll definitely remember it more than some random model. Or clothes that are advertised on your body. Not saying that's the future we want, but it would definitely work for a while.
RattlesnakeJake 19 hours ago [-]
That doesn't come across as any less creepy to the average user: "They stole my friend's likeness to sell me a lawn chair" still feels slimy.
I'm sure the real reason is that Facebook added a poorly thought out feature to their marketing tools around that time, and someone just decided to try it out.
godwinson__4-8 19 hours ago [-]
All this talk about how creepy Facebook is and yet most people use it? If Facebook was that creepy it wouldn't be a trillion dollar company. So they saw a "creepy" ad. They went "haha" or whatever and then kept using it. I mean how would you even quantify that the feature was "poorly thought out" or "slimy" at that point? If that was the case why didn't the user log off and never come back? Then at least Facebook would have a signal to work with.
Sometimes people really miss the forest for the trees. Most people actually like Facebook. If you can't wrap your head around that you have to accept you are distinct from the typical consumer. A trillion dollars is not made by appealing to the margins. If Facebook really sucked so bad everyone would log off.
Instead of another boring Facebook sucks comment why don't you ask your sibling why they didn't stop interacting with the website after that? You would probably learn more about the world doing that than trying to speculate about marketing tool features at a company you don't work for.
hbn 21 hours ago [-]
Zero people in the process of creating that ad said "we'll suggest people date their siblings, it'll be so memorable"
That is absolutely not a success story when trying to market a Christian dating platform.
dewey 20 hours ago [-]
It's about the "in which scenario" question of the OP, not this dating ad in particular.
dwa3592 21 hours ago [-]
This is a ridiculous argument that just because someone still remembers something means it was a good advertising strategy. This is partly why advertising sucks. The correct metric in this case would be did the user actually go on the date with the said person or at least initiated the conversation. In this person's case, very likely not. So the strategy is dumb, ridiculous and laughable but not useful or good in any sense.
godwinson__4-8 19 hours ago [-]
You seem ignorant of how money is made in these situations. The money is already made way before anyone ever goes on an actual date. Therefore the people showing you the ads are still incentivized to show the ad.
If you thought about things more clearly you would also realize that a platform that tried to measure something more like "how did the date actually go" would be even more dystopian. You want an algorithm to start pricing in the cost of you falling in love? If a date goes amazing should the software send you an additional invoice? People who use these apps are already essentially outsourcing interpersonal relationships. How far do you want to take that? The lack of precision is not "dumb, ridiculous and laughable" it's actually a saving grace.
boelboel 21 hours ago [-]
Many people want to date their own friends? Seeing your friend is on the site would show it's okay to use?
RIMR 17 hours ago [-]
They're married now, too.
themaninthedark 18 hours ago [-]
I could see people clicking through to see if their friend had a dating profile, if not for the romantic interest the gossip interest.
RattlesnakeJake 17 hours ago [-]
Okay, this may actually explain it XD
PyWoody 22 hours ago [-]
Roll tide.
srmatto 22 hours ago [-]
Is Meta abusing its users a problem? Yes. Does the TOS allow for it? Yes. Can people decide to just create a shell account and not actually participate? Sure.
One of the real insidious problems with Instagram and to some extent Facebook is that they provide a free, low friction way for business to communicate with current or potential customers. As a result many small businesses use Instagram as replacement for a public facing website and perhaps a blog or email newsletter. Many small business in my region depend on Instagram for this purpose, its nearly universal. It helps keep you stuck in Instagram so that you can see a business' hours, menu, or special events. I guess a shell account is the answer but you're still going to have to navigate the skinner box feed.
haliskerbas 22 hours ago [-]
Every time I try to create a shell account, it gets banned with no reason given. Even if it's just to follow a few influencer accounts.
srmatto 22 hours ago [-]
Well there you go, there is no reasonable way to be a non-participant while also staying up to date on businesses that choose to use the platform.
you also add `kk` in front of it and it renders just the embedded content
plagiarist 21 hours ago [-]
If the only way to interact with a business is via Facebook or Instagram, I don't interact with the business.
Unfortunately this is more of a problem for me than it is for them. I hope my position on this becomes more popular over time so that everyone can stop using spy- and adware.
srmatto 19 hours ago [-]
Small businesses are pretty important for a number of reasons and I think if people adopted this stance it would hurt them a lot more than it would hurt Meta.
cute_boi 22 hours ago [-]
You can't create shell account on fb/meta anymore. They will ask to turn on camera and rotate your head.
catlikesshrimp 22 hours ago [-]
U a manequin head. Add hair and moles. It mightbtake more than one try but it works.
Eventually, people who make shell accounts will be declared creepy child predators, but that isn't the case, yet.
breezybottom 19 hours ago [-]
I'm not making a mannequin head to see a restaurant menu.
greenchair 16 hours ago [-]
sounds like a business opportunity!
ed_elliott_asc 22 hours ago [-]
Print out a face of someone on Facebook and use that?
afavour 22 hours ago [-]
It’ll be obvious when you turn “their” head that it’s not real.
12 hours ago [-]
rolph 20 hours ago [-]
print out a panagram of a head, and paste it to a lampshade, or use a mannequin head and describe how you were horribly burned as a child.
remywang 21 hours ago [-]
Just stop using that cursed website
fourside 21 hours ago [-]
It really is that simple. “Users of company with a long track record of unethical behavior surprised at the company’s latest unethical business decision.”
I know it’s not easy for some to stop using their platform for some reason or another. That’s the point. When you use their product not because they are the best choice in a free market with options, but when you use it because you have to. Just don’t surprised when FB keeps pushing the limits.
frollogaston 18 hours ago [-]
Maybe they're not surprised, they just don't care
cryo32 19 hours ago [-]
Yeah just done that. Hosed my Instagram account.
rchaud 18 hours ago [-]
Even if you don't use FB, pictures of you tagged by your friends are fair game.
AuthAuth 14 hours ago [-]
Dont have friends, simple as
penr0se 23 hours ago [-]
This shouldn't really be surprising. It's very similar to what they did ~1.5 year ago when they started to use users' photos to promote Meta AI
I feel like having an account on a Meta site is today’s equivalent of being a smoker.
nicce 22 hours ago [-]
There isn't better analogy. I hope it spreads and we will see the same effect and social pressure as smokers faced.
catlikesshrimp 22 hours ago [-]
Vaping is the new smoking. Except you knew what was inside a cigar, while vape liquid is a generic term for anything inside a bottle.
busymom0 18 hours ago [-]
Agreed. I rarely see smokers nowadays but I see a lot of vapers everywhere even including on public transit and kids.
anon_shill 15 hours ago [-]
After years off of it I got back on it because living in NYC it’s a lot easier to find and get invited to events in the arts if you’re on it. I wish it weren’t so. I hate every part of it that isn’t a utility.
breezybottom 19 hours ago [-]
Being a smoker in the 1950s maybe.
tantalor 23 hours ago [-]
Comment on that thread:
> This seems entirely counter-productive and creepy.
Apt description of Instagram in general.
VortexLain 21 hours ago [-]
Sometimes it seems like Black Mirror screenwriters work at Meta as a side hustle.
jmorenoamor 21 hours ago [-]
Why? Because they can, and they will.
Leaving these services looks difficult or impossible, until you do it, and the world just keeps spinning.
red_admiral 20 hours ago [-]
As if Meta glasses weren't creepy enough already.
giancarlostoro 20 hours ago [-]
Amazing we live in an age where making a fake image of someone that looks realistic enough (and for a tiny thumbnail resolution to boot) with a company that makes arguably lesser used but somewhat frontier AI models, not using said models to make these ads less intrusive, whilst still making them feel slightly personalized.
Kind of a stretch, these days can't imagine anyone that views instagram as a place to store their cherished photos also.
jijijijij 21 hours ago [-]
Yeah, and then the charging businesses start selling your stuff anyway. So really, it's the comic creator, who is naive.
doublerabbit 23 hours ago [-]
Some reason that strip doesn't load for me.
nicce 22 hours ago [-]
It is just saying that if you don't pay for something, you are the product. I think it still fits well here.
alex1138 15 hours ago [-]
You can pay for Meta Verified. I think you'll still get banned
I'm getting very tired of this trope. Businesses need to do better. End of story
mcmcmc 19 hours ago [-]
Always amusing when people discover they’re paying for free services with something other than money.
renegade-otter 17 hours ago [-]
The news here is that people are still using instagram.
dewey 17 hours ago [-]
They have two billion monthly active users worldwide. There's many parts of this world that run on Meta (WhatsApp / Instagram) for things from government communication to every business only having IG pages or doing business through it.
"Damn, this is creepy level though & generally I’m all for ads knowing everything about me. Putting my wife’s profile pic in an ad is too much"
Presumably this reply is a joke?
hmokiguess 18 hours ago [-]
> "The era of ultra personalized ads has begun"
I think that's maybe a decade old by now if not more, a little late to the party I'd say
ricardofranco 22 hours ago [-]
Something similar happened to me a few years ago. my photo was used in an ad, making it look like I was selling stuff and promoting a page I’d never even clicked on... absolutely mind-blowing....
halflife 21 hours ago [-]
I actually find this incredible, since this highlights how desperate they are to advertise these glasses
fullshark 23 hours ago [-]
Ten years ago maybe this causes outrage, but I'm not sure anyone cares in 2026 including potential customers.
wartywhoa23 21 hours ago [-]
IG users were the proverbial product on this free-to-partake vanity fair since its inception.
blaqq2 17 hours ago [-]
Well, that took a dark turn. At this point, no one should be surprised. They've churned out a lot of movies with this plot; it was always going to happen.
quadrature 23 hours ago [-]
Is there actual proof that they are doing this. Theres not much to go on in the tweet.
tantalor 23 hours ago [-]
Besides the proof in the screenshot? What more do you want?
Do you think this user is faking it?
quadrature 22 hours ago [-]
Yes people frequently fake screenshots on social media. I'd want either a screenshot from a credible person, reporting from a journalist, trusted blogger, company statement etc.
dabinat 19 hours ago [-]
Well the company statement is that they say they can do this in their terms of service. It seems very plausible that Meta is doing what their TOS says they’re allowed to do.
tantalor 21 hours ago [-]
I'm not a journalist, but I don't think a reporter would go much further than "one user said...".
There is no need for fact checking an individual source, other than to verify the reporting is accurately representing what they said.
quadrature 20 hours ago [-]
A credible journalist would not entertain writing a story based on a screenshot some random user posts on social media.
vee-kay 21 hours ago [-]
[dead]
ryan42 23 hours ago [-]
yes, it happened to me recently.
The photo wasn't mine, but showed a profile photo of one of my facebook friends, and it had the glasses and said "On my way!"
edoceo 23 hours ago [-]
And they have a history of doing this. And their privacy/ToS allows it.
ornornor 19 hours ago [-]
Company owned by a sociopath and which has proven time and time and time again that they have no regard for your privacy does it again. It’s good to keep talking about it so that there is still some friction attached to pulling this off for Meta, but if you’re surprised at this I don’t know what to tell you.
Delete your social media and join the rest of us living free!
glimshe 21 hours ago [-]
When you don't pay for the product... YOU are the product.
subygan 20 hours ago [-]
As horrible as it sounds.
For the median user, It really is impossible to have an alternative to instagram / whatsapp / facebook. It is so easy to live in a bubble and say I'll host my own things. but a totally different thing to have a functioning network effects machine.
croes 19 hours ago [-]
How much abuse are the users willing to take before the take action?
fullshark 15 hours ago [-]
Possibly unlimited so long as the hot and cool people are on the platform.
ThouYS 22 hours ago [-]
why are people using these products exactly?
signing away their rights to their photos? making psychopaths filthy rich?
if the surveillance glasses are coming, these people will also have signed away the commons, which are not theirs to
give away
which is a german language scam site. i have no explanation how this happened, whether it is xcancel.com doing this or something loaded from twitter that caused xcancel to do this. never seen anythin like it before, would like to know more.
btw any further reloads of the xcancel url to that tweet totally work as expected.
pavel_lishin 23 hours ago [-]
Throwing an additional anecdote into the bucket, this did not happen for me. Any chance you have a dodgy extension installed?
jadamson 23 hours ago [-]
Sure you didn't just make a typo and hit a squatted domain?
kuschkufan 20 hours ago [-]
did not think of that, maybe it's this. i tried a couple typos just now and holy shit most of these are registered and you land on some really dodgy shit, i.e. porn and sites that seem to try out browser exploits. did not find the scam site from earlier, but can't count it out either.
do not go to sites like xancel.com, xcancl.com, xcncl.com .. they are not safe. damn typoswatters.
jijijijij 21 hours ago [-]
Doubt. xcancel.com does not even seem to have any advertisements at all, when I disable ublock. Site seems remarkable clean, no thirdparty connections apart from a cdn. Sure you didn't type cancelx.com? Cause there something shady is going on. Otherwise, I would strongly suggest checking your extensions or system for malware.
zombot 6 hours ago [-]
Important reminder that you don't belong to yourself anymore when using these "services".
hsuduebc2 23 hours ago [-]
I mean, what would you expect from company with morality of tobacco and slot machines producer? This is the least evil they are doing.
This thing resurface from time to time. It's the small text you never read. In this case, small part in ridiculously and intentionally big eula.
avgDev 21 hours ago [-]
I am surprised with the downvotes. Meta is the new tobacco corp.
Anoian 16 hours ago [-]
[dead]
nicechianti 22 hours ago [-]
[dead]
invalidusernam3 22 hours ago [-]
"I'm uncomfortable"
Should have read the terms and conditions
20 hours ago [-]
onemoresoop 22 hours ago [-]
What percentage of people read those? They’re even unitelligible to the layman.
hurfdurf 22 hours ago [-]
And that's how the HUMANCENTiPAD keeps growing.
dylan604 21 hours ago [-]
Hey Siri, find the gotchas in this EULA being presented /s
Yes, 2013: https://mashable.com/archive/facebook-ads-photo#ggcKnNfAUaqy
> According to Facebook's Statement of Rights and Responsibilities:
> You give us permission to use your name, profile picture, content, and information in connection with commercial, sponsored, or related content (such as a brand you like) served or enhanced by us. This means, for example, that you permit a business or other entity to pay us to display your name and/or profile picture with your content or information, without any compensation to you. If you have selected a specific audience for your content or information, we will respect your choice when we use it.
So it's not new. If you don't want this, delete your facebook account: https://www.facebook.com/privacy/dialog/delete-your-informat...
But what about the people in my photographs, whether on purpose or not? Did they give permission? That's the part that Meta doesn't really want to address.
Everything you upload, almost everywhere, can be used by the site owners to do whatever they like for their own purposes (reselling is somewhat often excluded / non-transferrable). There are a handful of exceptions, but they're very much exceptions, not the normal rule.
Remember the Zuck quote when asked why people gave him their data: “they trust me, dumb f*cks”.
When someone shows you who they are, trust them. He should be banned from having user data.
No, they do not. They do need to have people believe they do need to.
I refuse to sign up for an Insta. I will not acquiesce to 'lol we're going to put a login wall on every page'
“Few”, maybe.
It figuratively does not.
You’re not going to change the meaning of two words, here…
You’re a clown-horse.
This isn’t discourse anymore.
(Millions of cigarette smokers can be wrong!)
If anyone actually read them it's typically a unlimited unrestricted pipe of data they can use for anything.
And even I have mostly given up on the website T&C because most of them are so lengthy, a lot like I've given up on disabling javascript since the modern web frequently won't even render anything if you disable it.
To be fair, if they actually honor this promise, and if it means what it sounds like in plain English -- i.e. that if you only posted your photo for friends, only friends can ever see it even if FB uses it for advertising -- that is a halfway decent mitigation of the issue. Not ideal, but then again, you're not paying for FB, so what did you really expect?
I have lawyers make up terms and conditions that are really great for me, but which might cause real problems in some specific jurisdiction. Do I serve two terms and conditions or just one and hope I don't get in trouble.
I think once I'm big enough and have expensive lawyers might as well craft the terms appropriate to areas.
But now gets tricky in area A I can say "We have the right to change these terms and conditions unilaterally at any time we wish and you will be bound by the new conditions"
Now someone in area A moves to area B where terms and conditions are not as great for my company, and where you are not allowed to change terms and conditions unilaterally. Maybe I change terms for A to B immediately when they move to B so I don't get problems. But now they move out of B back to A, I probably have to ask them to agree to A conditions again.
Anyway, it is funny wondering just how nefarious these companies are with the terms and conditions.
What? I thought I could just paste a paragraph of all-caps legalese to my profile, and it would solve this!
All that will happen is this term or similar will appear in some other "contract" of adhesion. Your bank? Your motherboard's EULA? Paypal or LLM vendor terms? Your phone OS/ISP? Your car? Anywhere and everywhere where some necessity of modern life is provided by a faceless multinational corporation.
If you don't want this, organize and lobby against it politically. That's what corporations do when they want to screw us over, and it's working great for them. Is the act-as-an-isolated-mere-consumer approach working great for us?
https://qz.com/consumer-federation-america-sues-meta-scam-ad...
https://www.reuters.com/investigations/meta-is-earning-fortu...
It is unlikely that Meta will suddenly gain morals scruples to avoid profiting from user content, with or without user consent.
This is the same company that invasively spies on its own employees, to train AI models.
https://www.wired.com/story/meta-accidentally-let-employees-...
Meta — the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp — has a long history of abusing user trust. It has been fined billions for illegal activities like unauthorised data harvesting (Cambridge Analytica), illegal facial recognition, and mishandling children’s private information. Beyond what’s illegal, Meta is ethically notorious for emotional manipulation experiments, addictive design targeted at teenagers, rampant surveillance (even of non-users), promoting misinformation, and ignoring research that shows its products harm mental health.
https://leehopkins.com/meta-data-abuse-revealed/
It was hilarious, but also mind-boggling. In what scenario would pulling in a friend's profile photo create a useful ad?
Exactly in the scenario you just described. You still remember it and you are actively talking about it years after the fact.
remembering an advert correlates but is different to it being valuable.
Useful ad for Facebook. They made money on it. The advertiser didn't.
No one remembers who ran the ad. Even if we did, it would only be in a negative light due to a weird and off-putting advertising approach.
There's a difference between awareness campaigns and click / conversion campaigns and if there's some ads for a garden chair and your friend is sitting on it you'll definitely remember it more than some random model. Or clothes that are advertised on your body. Not saying that's the future we want, but it would definitely work for a while.
I'm sure the real reason is that Facebook added a poorly thought out feature to their marketing tools around that time, and someone just decided to try it out.
Sometimes people really miss the forest for the trees. Most people actually like Facebook. If you can't wrap your head around that you have to accept you are distinct from the typical consumer. A trillion dollars is not made by appealing to the margins. If Facebook really sucked so bad everyone would log off.
Instead of another boring Facebook sucks comment why don't you ask your sibling why they didn't stop interacting with the website after that? You would probably learn more about the world doing that than trying to speculate about marketing tool features at a company you don't work for.
That is absolutely not a success story when trying to market a Christian dating platform.
If you thought about things more clearly you would also realize that a platform that tried to measure something more like "how did the date actually go" would be even more dystopian. You want an algorithm to start pricing in the cost of you falling in love? If a date goes amazing should the software send you an additional invoice? People who use these apps are already essentially outsourcing interpersonal relationships. How far do you want to take that? The lack of precision is not "dumb, ridiculous and laughable" it's actually a saving grace.
One of the real insidious problems with Instagram and to some extent Facebook is that they provide a free, low friction way for business to communicate with current or potential customers. As a result many small businesses use Instagram as replacement for a public facing website and perhaps a blog or email newsletter. Many small business in my region depend on Instagram for this purpose, its nearly universal. It helps keep you stuck in Instagram so that you can see a business' hours, menu, or special events. I guess a shell account is the answer but you're still going to have to navigate the skinner box feed.
Unfortunately this is more of a problem for me than it is for them. I hope my position on this becomes more popular over time so that everyone can stop using spy- and adware.
I know it’s not easy for some to stop using their platform for some reason or another. That’s the point. When you use their product not because they are the best choice in a free market with options, but when you use it because you have to. Just don’t surprised when FB keeps pushing the limits.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42615538
> This seems entirely counter-productive and creepy.
Apt description of Instagram in general.
Leaving these services looks difficult or impossible, until you do it, and the world just keeps spinning.
https://xkcd.com/1150/
I'm getting very tired of this trope. Businesses need to do better. End of story
Presumably this reply is a joke?
I think that's maybe a decade old by now if not more, a little late to the party I'd say
Do you think this user is faking it?
There is no need for fact checking an individual source, other than to verify the reporting is accurately representing what they said.
The photo wasn't mine, but showed a profile photo of one of my facebook friends, and it had the glasses and said "On my way!"
Delete your social media and join the rest of us living free!
For the median user, It really is impossible to have an alternative to instagram / whatsapp / facebook. It is so easy to live in a bubble and say I'll host my own things. but a totally different thing to have a functioning network effects machine.
signing away their rights to their photos? making psychopaths filthy rich?
if the surveillance glasses are coming, these people will also have signed away the commons, which are not theirs to give away
You'd know that if you used social media /s
for some reason the url rewrote iteself to this: https://themenspiegel.click/c/de/52_merzchrupalla/?method=po...
which is a german language scam site. i have no explanation how this happened, whether it is xcancel.com doing this or something loaded from twitter that caused xcancel to do this. never seen anythin like it before, would like to know more.
btw any further reloads of the xcancel url to that tweet totally work as expected.
do not go to sites like xancel.com, xcancl.com, xcncl.com .. they are not safe. damn typoswatters.
This thing resurface from time to time. It's the small text you never read. In this case, small part in ridiculously and intentionally big eula.
Should have read the terms and conditions