Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Is Facebook Stalking You To Suggest New Friends?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2016 02:12 PM
    Ever surprised by finding a person whose face you remember but not the name until the "People you may know" feature on Facebook told you about him/her?
     
    This is probably because Facebook stalked you and used your phone's location to suggest new people you could befriend.
     
    The accuracy that this feature shows has surprised as well as disturbed Facebook users for some time now. 
     
    "Thanks to tracking the location of users' smartphones, the social network may suggest that you friend people you have shared a GPS data point with, meaning your friend suggestions could include someone whose face you know, but whose name you did not until Facebook offered it up to you," Tech website Fusion reported on Tuesday.
     
    This happens when two people are at the same place at the same time and used their smartphones to either check-in or just scroll through what his/her friends might have shared on the website. 
     
     
    Facebook "always" has access to a user's location until the setting is changed to "never".
     
    Meanwhile, Facebook has clarified that this is not the only reason why users are getting these suggestions. 
     
    "The two persons must have had something else in common, such as overlapping networks," a Facebook spokesperson was quoted as saying.
     
    "Location-information by itself does not indicate that two people might be friends. That's why location is only one of the factors we use to suggest people you may know," the spokesperson said.
     
    If this news disturbs you, you can prevent this by turning off Facebook's access to your location -- a feature which is in your phone's privacy settings.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Amazon's Latest Kindle Mostly Wants To Disappear

    Amazon's Latest Kindle Mostly Wants To Disappear
    NEW YORK — Will loyal fans of e-books be willing to pay tablet prices for dedicated e-readers? Amazon is about to find out.

    Amazon's Latest Kindle Mostly Wants To Disappear

    HTC's New Phone HTC 10 Focuses On Camera Quality

    HTC's New Phone HTC 10 Focuses On Camera Quality
      NEW YORK — HTC is promising a better camera — along with refinements in audio and design — as it unveils its latest flagship phone, the HTC 10.

    HTC's New Phone HTC 10 Focuses On Camera Quality

    Indian-Origin Scientist Ratnakumar Bugga Selected For NASA's Pioneering Programme

    Indian-Origin Scientist Ratnakumar Bugga Selected For NASA's Pioneering Programme
    An Indian-origin scientist's proposal has been selected for NASA's Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) programme -- an initiative that invests in transformative architectures through the development of pioneering technologies.

    Indian-Origin Scientist Ratnakumar Bugga Selected For NASA's Pioneering Programme

    Facebook Programs Computers To Describe Photos For The Blind

    Facebook Programs Computers To Describe Photos For The Blind
    Facebook is training its computers to become seeing-eye guides for blind and visually impaired people as they scroll through the pictures posted on the world's largest online social network.

    Facebook Programs Computers To Describe Photos For The Blind

    Driverless Car Makers, Government Regulators, Face Ethical Dilemma

    Driverless Car Makers, Government Regulators, Face Ethical Dilemma
    OTTAWA — A Canadian expert on the ethics of engineering says governments need to play a greater role in the programming of so-called driverless vehicles.

    Driverless Car Makers, Government Regulators, Face Ethical Dilemma

    Google April Fool's Prank Boomerangs

    Google April Fool's Prank Boomerangs
    Google is acknowledging that it pranked itself after an April Fool's Day Gmail tweak angered some people who use Google's email for work.

    Google April Fool's Prank Boomerangs