Skip to main content

Third-party devs improperly accessed some Facebook groups’ private data

Facebook is yet again at the center of a user privacy mishap. In a blog post, its head of platform partnerships, Konstantinos Papamiltiadis, revealed that about 100 third-party app developers had improper access to personal data of several groups’ members despite the fact that the social network overhauled its APIs to prevent this exact behavior last year.

Before the alterations to the Groups system, Facebook allowed outside developers to extract information of a group’s members such as their profile pictures, names, and more. All they needed was a green light from the group’s admin. However, in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, the company rolled out an update that restricted the third-party access to the group’s name, the number of users, and posts’ content, and made giving up their private data optional for members.

Recommended Videos

In a review, Facebook found out that scores of developers were able to function based on the outdated group rules and continued to siphon up members’ personal details even when they weren’t supposed to. It says at least 11 of those partners were active in the last 60 days.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Most of these partners, Facebook claims, were social media management and video streaming apps. The former, for instance, enables businesses to manage multiple Facebook groups and offer customer support from a centralized dashboard.

While it’s unclear at this point whether member data was abused for advertising or any other illicit purposes, Facebook says it has now revoked access and plans to conduct audits to confirm the data has been eradicated.

“Today we are also reaching out to roughly 100 partners who may have accessed this information since we announced restrictions to the Groups API, although it’s likely that the number that actually did is smaller and decreased over time. Although we’ve seen no evidence of abuse, we will ask them to delete any member data they may have retained and we will conduct audits to confirm that it has been deleted,” added Papamiltiadis.

Facebook has seemingly ended up in the crosshair of the public and governments across the globe every other week. A few days ago, the social media behemoth announced a companywide rebrand and new logos in an attempt to dampen its ailing image and more importantly, signal that its non-Facebook (such as Instagram and WhatsApp) are not entirely defined by Facebook, the social network.

Shubham Agarwal
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Shubham Agarwal is a freelance technology journalist from Ahmedabad, India. His work has previously appeared in Firstpost…
Targeted Facebook ads are about to lose a big audience: iPhone owners
facebook hacked

The face of Facebook advertising is about to change. With Apple’s rollout of iOS14 in September, Facebook issued a short statement to advertisers letting them know that their formerly hypertargeted ads, as facilitated by the Facebook Audience Network platform, might not work anymore. As first reported by Axios, this will likely have a huge impact on the advertising industry, of which Facebook plays a huge part in the U.S. But while this may be bad for the advertisers and for Facebook, this could be a win for users’ privacy

The next update of the iPhone software will feature a new function wherein users have to opt in to being tracked by advertisers. This will require apps to ask iPhone users’ permission to collect and share their data. This puts advertisers who rely heavily on Facebook’s platform in a pickle, as Facebook’s ads are notorious for being extremely specific to the user.
Accomplishing what the boycott couldn’t
July 31 saw the end of a massive, much-ballyhooed advertising boycott — with more than 1,000 brands participating — that was supposed to bring Facebook to its financial knees in the name of social justice. Instead, the boycott barely dented the platform’s revenue.

Read more
Facebook removes nearly 800 QAnon-related groups, pages, hashtags, and ads
QAnon conspiracy theorist holds a sign

Facebook took down nearly 800 groups associated with the far-right conspiracy theory group QAnon on Wednesday, as well as more than 1,500 advertisements and 100 pages tied to the group in a move to restrict "violent acts."

In a blog post, Facebook said the action is part of a broader "Dangerous Individuals and Organizations" policy measure to remove and restrict content that has led to real-world violence. The policy will also impact militia groups and political protest organizations like Antifa.

Read more
How Boogaloo groups persist and proliferate on Facebook, despite crackdown
facebook hacked

A new report by the watchdog organization the Tech Transparency Project alleges that Facebook has failed in a promised crackdown on the so-called “Boogaloo Movement” due to a slow and ineffective response.

The Boogaloo Movement is a loose network of white power-affiliated social media groups that call for a second civil war, or are very sure that one is about to happen. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, the term Boogaloo today is “regularly deployed by white nationalists and neo-Nazis who want to see society descend into chaos so that they can come to power and build a new fascist state.” The term "boogaloo" has been co-opted from the infamously named 1984 movie "Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo."

Read more