Facebook privacy policies keep going down the drain. Thats enough reason for many to abandon it.
- Facebooks Terms Of Service are completely one-sided
Lets start with the basics. Facebooks Terms Of Service state that not only do they own your data ( section 2.1) , but if you dont keep it up to date and accurate ( section 4.6) , they can terminate your account ( section 14) . You could argue that the terms are just protecting Facebooks interests, and are not in practice enforced, but in the context of their other activities, this defense is pretty weak. As youll see, theres no reason to give them the benefit of the doubt. Essentially, they see their customers as unpaid employees for crowd-sourcing ad-targeting data.
- Facebooks CEO has a documented history of unethical behavior
From the very beginning of Facebooks existence, there are questions about Zuckerbergs ethics. According to BusinessInsider.com, he used Facebook user data to guess email passwords and read personal email in order to discredit his rivals. These allegations, albeit unproven and somewhat dated, nonetheless raise troubling questions about the ethics of the CEO of the worlds largest social network. Theyre particularly compelling given that Facebook chose to fork over $65M to settle a related lawsuit alleging that Zuckerberg had actually stolen the idea for Facebook.
- Facebook has flat out declared war on privacy
Founder and CEO of Facebook, in defense of Facebooks privacy changes last January: People have really gotten comfortable not only sharing more information and different kinds, but more openly and with more people. That social norm is just something that has evolved over time. More recently, in introducing the Open Graph API: . the default is now social. Essentially, this means Facebook not only wants to know everything about you, and own that data, but to make it available to everybody. Which would not, by itself, necessarily be unethical, except that .
- Facebook is pulling a classic bait-and-switch
At the same time that theyre telling developers how to access your data with new APIs, they are relatively quiet about explaining the implications of that to members. What this amounts to is a bait-and-switch. Facebook gets you to share information that you might not otherwise share, and then they make it publicly available. Since they are in the business of monetizing information about you for advertising purposes, this amounts to tricking their users into giving advertisers information about themselves. This is why Facebook is so much worse than Twitter in this regard: Twitter has made only the simplest ( and thus, more credible) privacy claims and their customers know up front that all their tweets are public. Its also why the FTC is getting involved, and people are suing them ( and winning) .
- Facebook is a bully
When Pete Warden demonstrated just how this bait-and-switch works ( by crawling all the data that Facebooks privacy settings changes had inadvertently made public) they sued him. Keep in mind, this happened just before they announced the Open Graph API and stated that the default is now social. So why sue an independent software developer and fledgling entrepreneur for making data publicly available when youre actually already planning to do that yourself? Their real agenda is pretty clear: they dont want their membership to know how much data is really available. Its one thing to talk to developers about how great all this sharing is going to be; quite another to actually see what that means in the form of files anyone can download and load into MatLab.
- Even your private data is shared with applications
At this point, all your data is shared with applications that you install. Which means now youre not only trusting Facebook, but the application developers, too, many of whom are too small to worry much about keeping your data secure. And some of whom might be even more ethically challenged than Facebook. In practice, what this means is that all your data - all of it - must be effectively considered public, unless you simply never use any Facebook applications at all. Coupled with the OpenGraph API, you are no longer trusting Facebook, but the Facebook ecosystem.
- Facebook is not technically competent enough to be trusted
Even if we werent talking about ethical issues here, I cant trust Facebooks technical competence to make sure my data isnt hijacked. For example, their recent introduction of their Like button makes it rather easy for spammers to gain access to my feed and spam my social network. Or how about this gem for harvesting profile data? These are just the latest of a series of Keystone Kops mistakes, such as accidentally making users profiles completely public, or the cross-site scripting hole that took them over two weeks to fix. They either dont care too much about your privacy or dont really have very good engineers, or perhaps both.
- Facebook makes it incredibly difficult to truly delete your account
Its one thing to make data public or even mislead users about doing so; but where I really draw the line is that, once you decide youve had enough, its pretty tricky to really delete your account. They make no promises about deleting your data and every application youve used may keep it as well. On top of that, account deletion is incredibly ( and intentionally) confusing. When you go to your account settings, youre given an option to deactivate your account, which turns out not to be the same thing as deleting it. Deactivating means you can still be tagged in photos and be spammed by Facebook ( you actually have to opt out of getting emails as part of the deactivation, an incredibly easy detail to overlook, since you think youre deleting your account) . Finally, the moment you log back in, youre back like nothing ever happened! In fact, its really not much different from not logging in for awhile. To actually delete your account, you have to find a link buried in the on-line help ( by buried I mean it takes five clicks to get there) . Or you can just click here. Basically, Facebook is trying to trick their users into allowing them to keep their data even after theyve deleted their account.
- Facebook doesnt ( really) support the Open Web
The so-called Open Graph API is named so as to disguise its fundamentally closed nature. Its bad enough that the idea here is that we all pitch in and make it easier than ever to help Facebook collect more data about you. Its bad enough that most consumers will have no idea that this data is basically public. Its bad enough that they claim to own this data and are aiming to be the one source for accessing it. But then they are disingenuous enough to call it open, when, in fact, it is completely proprietary to Facebook. You cant use this feature unless youre on Facebook. A truly open implementation would work with whichever social network we prefer, and it would look something like OpenLike. Similarly, they implement just enough of OpenID to claim they support it, while aggressively promoting a proprietary alternative, Facebook Connect.
- The Facebook application itself sucks
Between the farms and the mafia wars and the top news ( which always guesses wrong - is that configurable somehow? ) and the myriad privacy settings and the annoying ads ( with all that data about me, the best they can apparently do is promote dating sites, because, uh, Im single) and the thousands upon thousands of crappy applications, Facebook is almost completely useless to me at this point. Yes, I could probably customize it better, but the navigation is ridiculous, so I dont bother. ( And, yet, somehow, I cant even change colors or apply themes or do anything to make my page look personalized.) Lets not even get into how slowly your feed page loads. Basically, at this point, Facebook is more annoying than anything else.