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Allegations around the use of Facebook data to target political campaigns by Cambridge Analytica, reported by The Observer, The New York Times and Channel 4, have left many wondering if they should be so free with their personal information online.
Though the specific Facebook feature that gave Cambridge Analytica access to the data of millions of users without their permission is no longer available, what you willingly share can still be used to build up a detailed picture about you for targeting adverts. If this has you worried, here are some tips to tighten up your online presence.
Clear out the clutter
The first step is to conduct a clean sweep of all app interactions you鈥檝e previously approved. Clicking will bring up the list of Facebook apps that have access to your data. Scan through the list, and if there are any apps you don鈥檛 use, don鈥檛 recognise or don鈥檛 remember 鈥撀燿isable them. Also look at the “apps others use” option that shows the information that can be handed over on your behalf, by your friends opting into apps. Though much of the information is trivial, it does include personal details like your date of birth and personal interests you may not want to spread widely. Similarly, it’s easy to do a privacy check-up for all things Google with .
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Install a tracker blocker
Many companies use trackers. These sit in the background of websites and monitor your surfing patterns. Install a browser extension like聽 to block them, or聽聽that clicks on random ads in the background to confuse them.
Read the small print
Tech firms rely on the fact that users won鈥檛 read the privacy policies before clicking 鈥淚 agree鈥. Be more vigilant, and take your time to understand what you鈥檙e sharing and with whom when you鈥檙e tempted to download the next big app. 鈥淏e proactive,鈥 says Tim Turner, a data protection consultant. 鈥淎sk companies what data they have, where they obtained it from, and who they鈥檝e supplied it to.鈥
Go dark
It鈥檚 a drastic move, but some are calling for people to . Even聽, the co-founder of Facebook-owned WhatsApp has joined the movement. However, Facebook don鈥檛 make this easy: they prompt you to 鈥渄eactivate鈥, rather than delete, your account. Doing so will put your account into the deep freeze, with your data still held by Facebook. Instead, you can visit to permanently delete your account. It鈥檚 not an instantaneous process: there鈥檚 a two-week cooling off period, then Facebook takes 90 days to wipe all trace of you from its database forever. Even then Facebook own both Instagram and WhatsApp, so cutting ties completely with the company聽could be just too much hassle for some.
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