Facebook is probably tracking you whether you use it or not - and it doesn't really give you a choice
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Alex Brandon/AP
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
Even if you've never signed up for Facebook or have logged out of your account, the social networking company is likely tracking your virtual movements - and it doesn't offer any way for you to opt out.
Among the information Facebook collects on non-users are their internet protocol (IP) addresses, the operating system and web browser they're using, and the presence of cookies. IP addresses can be used to infer users' geographic location, and cookies frequently act as "identifiers that websites use to know if you've visited before," Baser said.
Non-users can't see what information Facebook has collected about them, nor can they opt out of that tracking through the site, a company spokeswoman said. That's precisely because they don't have an account on the service, she said.The question of what kinds of information Facebook collects on non- and logged-out users came up during CEO Mark Zuckerberg's congressional hearings last week, which focused on the Cambridge Analytica scandal and the company's privacy and data-use policies. Lawmakers appeared concerned with the ability of Facebook users and non-users alike to control their own information.
Committee on the Judiciary
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Connecticut, was among those asking pointed questions of Zuckerberg last week about the company's privacy policies.
The story is a little different for Facebook users who access other apps and websites when they aren't logged into the social network. Facebook not only tracks that activity but links it back to users' Facebook accounts and can use it to target ads at those users, the spokeswoman said.
On Facebook's ad preferences page, users can opt out of having their off-Facebook activities used to target them with ads on Facebook. They can also opt out of having Facebook target them with ads on other sites and services. But they can't opt out of the company tracking their activities on those sites and services.Non-users and logged out users alike do have another option, though. Some ad blocking apps allow users to block tracking by social networks on other apps and sites.
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