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Facebook’s ubiquitous ‘like’ button found on countless websites accessible in Germany was declared in violation of the country’s strict privacy laws by a state data protection official on Friday.

Thilo Weichert, who works for the data protection centre of the northern German state of Schleswig-Holstein, said the social network’s application allowing internet users to express their appreciation of something online, illegally cobbled together a profile of their web habits.

“Facebook can trace every click on a website, how long I’m on it, what I’m interested in,” he said. According to Weichert, all the information was sent to the US company even if someone was not a Facebook member.

Saying this contravened both German and EU privacy laws, Weichert demanded websites in Schleswig-Holstein remove the ‘like’ button from their offerings by the end of September or face a fine of up to €50,000.

He said Facebook probably used the data for advertising purposes and provided website operators an analysis of user traffic.

Facebook rejected Weichert’s claim and said in a statement that the website’s social plug-ins were in compliance with European data protection laws.

The company admitted the ‘like’ button could pass on information such as user IP addresses, but said the data was deleted after 90 days as per industry standard.

Facebook users remained in “full control of their data” while using social plug-ins, the statement said.

 

(Source)

 

Thanks for reading says DJ

Posted

I doubt Zuckerberg even cares. He ripped off the Facebook idea from the Winklevoss twins so I don't think he has any concerns about the moral implications of violating people's privacy. <_<

Posted

I doubt Zuckerberg even cares. He ripped off the Facebook idea from the Winklevoss twins so I don't think he has any concerns about the moral implications of violating people's privacy. <_<

 

:rolleyes: Yeah cause "The Social Network" is an entirely reliable, 100% accurate source. Even in the movie they're idea was nothing close to what he actually did.

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