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The fact that Facebook is open and proud of its end-user hostility in service to the business interests of advertisers is surely a turning point.

What kind of professional integrity would allow someone to continue working on a product that doesn't even pretend to serve the best interests of its end-users?

I seriously worry about the number of technology standards boards and governance groups that purport to represent the interests of end-users but are actually made up of (and lobbied by) people with this kind of "integrity".

They're like the tabaco industry complaining about having their products clearly labeled as adictive and carcenogenic.

Doing so probably harmed small Mom & Pop tobaconist's bottom line too.

The same professional integrity from FOSS developers that profit from Facebook money, earned via such practices, by using Facebook sponsored projects.
Depends on who you define as the end user. If the end user is the advertiser, while the profiles are the product, their stand makes sense (Not arguing about ethics here).
Just because there is now a multi-billion-dollar industry based on the abject betrayal of our privacy doesn’t mean the sociopaths who built it have any right whatsoever to continue getting away with it.

This is fair enough as it goes but remember it's coming from one of the biggest cheerleaders of a company that became the richest in the world while taking away user freedoms we used to take for granted on general purpose computing devices.

I'd love to see Facebook taken down several pegs but I think the rest of FAANG is overdue for some medicine too.

You can easily replace your apple products, but not your social network apps. all your friends have to switch, too
Actually at this point I don't know anyone who uses social media applications. My kids, well teenagers, use iMessage and SMS and coordinate on Discord (that's not really a social network). My wife uses word of mouth and local referrals to run her hair business with communication via SMS/iMessage/email and a bookings app she has. All my friends use use email and iMessage. My parents both use email and/or SMS too.

The only thing I use any form of social media for is signing up to Twitter to tag Royal Mail or Hermes delivery in complaints about twice a year because they actually listen if you shitpost in public.

I see society functioning exactly how it did before if in 30 seconds time social media disappeared off the face of the planet.

I think your samples might be biased. tiktok has 800 million active users, Instagram has over 1 billion, and fb has 2.70 billion. Even with 100% overlap, that's still 35% of the planet
The point is more that nothing will change if they blink out overnight.
This is getting harder and harder as Apple’s ecosystem becomes more comprehensive and more integrated. There are benefits of course but it’s pretty sticky.

OTOH I dumped Facebook years ago and haven’t missed it for a second. WhatsApp has proven a lot harder to wean off of since my friends refuse to switch.

I understand wanting to get rid of FB, but whats your reason for whatsapp? Whatsapp is end to end encrypted, so they can't get access to your messages, no? Is it just that they are owned by FB, or do you have greater security / privacy concerns that I am missing?
Same boat here. I dumped WhatsApp mostly because it's owned by Facebook, which I consider a bit of a privacy risk by itself. On top of that, the app requests access to lots of permissions I don't understand the need for.

Some examples: find accounts on the device, view WiFi connections, retrieve running apps, use biometric hardware.

I can see how the first two might be required.

"Find accounts on the device" is possibly required to connect to your account in order to get your contact list. "View WiFi connections" is possibly needed for getting internet connection.

I can't really see any possible use for the other two though.

I've only looked extremely shallowly at Android development, but I am aware that quite often you need to ask for some particular permission to get access to something that's not particularly obvious from the permission name.

Not trying to give Facebook a free ride here, I am well aware that there is a very high chance they want some of the permissions for "nefarious" purposes. I think companies should have some transparent way of publishing why they want a particular set of permissions.

I have seen companies showing a message along the lines of "we will be asking for <permission> we need to ask this for <reason>" and I do think more companies should do this.

Wifi makes sense, as you can configure apps to only work over wifi (and from what I remember you can do backups only when wifi is available).
I don't like having Facebook apps on my phone at all and I don't like them having the metadata on who I'm messaging and when.
Whatsapp contents are secure, but who you are talking to - what groups, what time, how often, is all valuable information.

If you are in a group with a lot of Facebook users that have elementary school kids but are otherwise unrelated, chances are you have one too. Facebook might even infer who you are, and your kids, even if you don’t have an account

Not to mention that most users continuously sync their contact list, and with that info FB can create a much broader and more precise graph of all the network connections. Cross that with, say, political groups you're part of, and you're not only exposing yourself but everybody else who's close to you, regardless of them using either app.
Same situation with WhatsApp. It's deeply engrained in my home country's social groups. One group of friends followed me to Telegram, along with my direct family... but my more distant relatives and other groups of friends didn't bite. The other difficult one was Facebook Messenger.

Guess I'm banking on people finally realizing how creepy Facebook is. But since some of my friends have abandoned Facebook in favor of Instagram, of all places... guess I'm playing the long game.

Which is the reason a lot of people refuse to use the Apple ecosystem. I do own an iPad but I use it exclusively for web browsing, email and reading books.

The only Apple app I use is the default Books apps and that is it, and I couldn't be happier.

Using an Apple device without having to deal with Apple's ecosystem is amazing, I only wish they would let Chrome be Chrome, not a reskin of Safari...

Don't give them a choice.

I uninstalled WhatsApp two years back and just told everyone I use Signal. No big lecture on Facebook is evil, why you have to use Signal etc etc.

Most people are busy being told what apps to install every 2 hours by some one or the other so they are already conditioned to being told what to do. Many just installed without even a question, cause they get tired of using sms or email with me for everything.

Yes! If you are reading this, please give Signal a try.

You might be surprised that a few people in your contact list might already have signal.

Signal has (or will very soon have, depending on when you update) group calls! This is very exciting I think. Together with the new and improved group chat, now is the perfect time to get started with Signal if you aren’t here already.

You might have more pull than you think. I was able to get my mum on signal on her iPhone. You don’t need everyone you know to be on signal. Let’s start with just the ones you talk to the most.

I've been doing this and have a fairly tech savvy circle of friends but so far I've only managed to get a handful of them to start using Signal.

I think hunan's just aren't very good at responding to threats that are somewhat vague and in the future.

Apple products have social media baked into them - and one that cannot be used on other devices. Remember iMessage exists?
My understanding (not living there) is that in the US, Apple have a dominant position in group chat via their proprietary embrace-extend-extinguish version of SMS.

In my experience, it's relatively straightforward to get people to switch off WhatsApp/Messenger to Signal/Telegram, since it's just another app. It'd be more difficult if it held a privileged position in the OS.

Whenever they want to make a statement, they use newspaper ads, what does it tell you about FB Ads?
I think Gruber's analysis is quite correct:

    Full-page issue messaging ads are about reaching very specific demographics 
    in a conspicuous way. But in today’s world, it’s kind of transparent whom 
    Facebook is targeting here: old white politicians.
so I don't think those two are related.
Is the implication that old black and Asian politicians don't read newspapers? Or that they don't have the same incentives to support Facebook?
Just that the majority of politicians, especially in the Senate, are older white men.
Yes, about 65 percent in the Senate, but what of it? The vast majority of older white men are not politicians, so this would not seem an effective way to reach them—it seems irrelevant to mention it. And if it is , in fact, politicians Facebook wants to reach why is it only the old white male ones? Surely Facebook wants to reach politicians of all demographics.
Facebook is a terrible company. I recommend reading this recent Atlantic article comparing Facebook to the nuclear doomsday machine. It may be a bit overblown in it's comparison, but I think it makes some very valid points: https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2020/12/faceb...
Please include the other faces of facebook: Facebook, Instagram, Whatsapp, and Oculus all deserve your boycott.
and unfortunately ctrl-labs which I thought had promise until it was swallowed.
React, ReasonML, Folly,...
React is far beyond that now. Facebook could implode 10 minutes from now and React would live on successfully.
React is so popular now that I've had non-tech people comment that if the website used React that it would be possible to do better UX and UI.
> Users can easily choose to keep providing Facebook (and anyone else) with all the information they want. Or they can choose not to.

This part hits the nail on the head. Facebook is intentionally being misleading in this campaign. I’ve had the IDFA turned off on my phone for years. Now apps have to ask for it individually. If apps have to prompt to access it, and this benefits small businesses so much, wouldn’t people agree to it with the right framing? Why doesn’t Facebook provide a method in its tracking SDKs that shows an interstitial about how this is good for small business before asking users if they want to be tracked?

Of course, Facebook would never do that. That’s because “informed consent” with adware doesn’t really exist... once people actually understand the scope of ad tracking networks... they don’t want it.

I’m not even against the concept of targeted advertising. Facebook’s first party properties are fine venues for it. I’m even (generally) ok with an advertiser retargeting me based on information they have about me. I wish that Facebook was prohibited from scooping up data in every other app I use and combining it with other data that they purchase. You can have targeted advertising without a massive surveillance dragnet.

Super agree. I can't describe that ad in any other way than a sophisticated lie. They are making it look like Apple wants to take away choice from the user when it's exactly the other way around.

They are careful to never mention what the iOS 14 updates are actually about, but a lie by omission is still a lie.

I call it fundamental dishonesty. Some big problems for team fb:

1. It is difficult to recover from such an obviously dishonest position.

2. Users are supposed to be the customers, not small businesses. If users aren't the customers, they can't receive Facebook as a product "for free."

3. The current business model offers outsized returns because it leverages tech people don't want or don't yet know they don't want.

I am extremely torn about this thing, especially as I work in the privacy space. But it's hard to ignore the argument put forward by Ben Thompson that better tracking for facebook, actually tends to help small businesses. If you can't hyper target, you get ads for tooth paste, cars and deodorant (TV ads). If you can then you get ads for boutique florists in your area or gadgets you might actually like.

I don't know what the solution is, because I want to be on small businesses side.

And the issue with apple now is, I guarantee 99% of people will reject IDFA, because it is about personal data and it does sound bad. But the end result of this might not be that good for small business.

Allowing small businesses to tack on a stealth 5% charge onto your credit card also helps small businesses, but would you advocate for that?
If you could convince credit card companies to waive their fees for small businesses and make it back by charging more to big businesses, that could be a pretty big win.
That will lead to what happened to farm subsidies. They were targeted to small farms so the large farms broke themselves into a series of small farms to maximize the subsidy.
That's pretty hard to do if you use a definition of small business that excludes any company owned in whole or in part by a parent corporation.
I don't intuitively understand how this change blocks targeted advertising outright. Sure, Facebook will have less information about me from other apps that I use, but certainly it has numerous other ways of targeting ads to me.

Facebook knows my demographic because I provided it to them when I signed up and the types of content I interact with in their apps, and they have both coarse and granular location (IP address and the location permission) from their first party apps. Most relevant forms of targeting seem to still work. Ads from the local florist can still be targeted.

It's credible to me that other, Facebook specific, magic such as "lookalike audience" and other behavior cohorting tools may be impacted by this change, but I don't view this narrow issue of IDFA consent to be an absolute judgment on ad targeting.

Most “Facebook Ads” are not delivered on Facebook. It is delivered through their Audience Network. I think their ability to track users on and within Facebook will be largely the same, but their ability to identify users while they are not using a Facebook owned property will be significantly impacted.

I think digital advertising does not have to be bad, but it very much is. Unfortunately it will probably get worse before it gets better.

> If you can't hyper target, you get ads for tooth paste, cars and deodorant (TV ads).

Why should I be forced to give tracking information to allow people to 'hyper-target' me? I don't want to be hyper-targeted regardless of how small the business is.

Well, or how about letting yourself being hyper targeted by reading a magazine aimed at, say, parents or pilots or knitters or golfers or whatever. No need to give up your privacy for that, and you still get pertinent advertisement, and those specialised small businesses can still reach their target audience.
I'm assuming hyper-targeting in this context means targeting me as an individual, rather than targeting the content.

I'm absolutely fine with making ads relevant to the content I'm looking at. If I'm reading a blog about baldness and someone advertises some sort of hair transplant on the page that's totally fine!

What I'm not cool on is an advertiser tracking this page, cataloguing me as someone that suffers from hair loss, fingerprinting my device to follow other pages I visit to further target me, then placing advertisements for herbal remedies for baldness on every single page I visit, then changing the advert based on machine learning about the most effective advert based on my other attributes (a single young male living in a city).

These two things are not the same.

Adapt the ads to the content along which they are served, not to the people looking at them. That’s not difficult, and has zero privacy implication.
They can just use information that their users choose to share voluntary with them, such as language, location history from posts, interests, group membership, places where they checked in.

There's no need to spy on users outside Facebook's app to get relevant data.

It's not about getting profile information from users but rather getting attribution for things like tracking ad clicks to product buys.
It’s pretty easy to ignore that argument from Ben Thompson. It was one of the lowest quality posts of all time on Stratechery and full of giant holes in logic. Just see tons and tons of the comments from that HN thread. Here was mine for example,

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25344934

Is there any research how much benefit "hyper targeting" actually gives? Not just "it helps" but quantitatively (e.g. more effect than 30 just mildly target adds? Or just more effect than 2?)

In particular, how does it compare to somewhat targeted offline ads like (local shop advertising in local newspaper) or (car stuff advertised in car enthusiast magazine)?

Also, the question is about having a level playing field. If your competition has access to highly effective advertising, you can't afford to not use it as well. So right now you need it. However, if hyper targeting were forbidden (because the spying and stalking is prohibited by law or because browsers make it infeasible) then you don't need it.

It’s really hard to prove as sales channels are messy.

Done right, it’s worth a lot.

Some vague numbers from facebook:

> https://twitter.com/DaveStangis/status/1339183289349918721

"cut of 60% per advertising dollar." So between 2 and 3. That is incredibly little for all the surveillance it brings with it. And I don't think fb would understate here.

If "hyper targeting" is that useless, why are even still discussing allowing it?

IMO this doesn't effect small business with revenue as much as it hurts their spending of marketing with facebook there are other marketing avenues that can be used by small businesses
There's an argument to be made though that hyper-targeting helps niche or smaller businesses more than a P&G who has to run a larger campaign so the IRR could drop more for smaller businesses than a large company on Facebook specifically?
The real argument here, that someone else made, is that if we want to help small businesses, Facebook needs to go. In the past small businesses would just use other small, local business, to advertise.

Facebook & co are just destroying all these small businesses (local newspapers, local magazines, billboard companies, local news websites, whatever).

It's naive to think that local newspapers would just spring back to life if Facebook disappeared.

The internet has changed how people consume and get new information forever and that won't change anytime soon.

I'm not arguing for actual news*papers. But Facebook and Reddit and other such aggregators are killing even local forums. They're sucking the local monetization into a US based black hole (because they then proceed to dodge taxes in the US).
Being pro-Small Business doesn’t meant you have to be pro-Advertising. Facebook makes a killing taking money from small businesses through advertising, yet it is consistently one of the lowest ROI marketing techniques, not to mention generally creates the worst UX.

Can you build a successful business on advertising? Yes. But I’d argue that you don’t need to. Almost every service I pay for came to me by word of mouth. That takes time and effort to cultivate, but it isn’t affected by a software update. Or me wanting to not share my personal data.

> Facebook makes a killing taking money from small businesses through advertising

It also takes a lot of money from governments and political campaigns. The micro-level targeting allows highly specific messages to be shown to people matching a specific segment and contradictory messages to be shown to another segment. It's disingenuous of Facebook to claim this is just about small business when it's arguably about undermining the foundations of democracy.

Word of mouth doesn't work for super niche services/products where e.g. there's a good chance no one who's recommendations you trust would be interested in the same type of service/product

It also favours more established businesses that are more known, making it harder for new businesses to gain any traction.

I'm not keen on advertising (I use adblockers on all my devices etc.), but there are definitely some (in my opinion) some compelling arguments on both sides.

> Word of mouth doesn't work for super niche services/products

Nonsense.

See, there are (were?) lots of niche specific publications and communities. They'd actually know about a subject, and provide informed and largely unbiased advice, and carry advertisement, of course. Similarly, there were regional newspapers, carrying information and advertisement of regional interest.

TV and other broad media could not steal their advertisement dollars, because that was the only way to reach the niche or region.

What Facebook is doing is to usurp all of that and monopolise advertisement, driving smaller niche and regional publishers out of business. Their hypocrisy is astounding.

> there's a good chance no one who's recommendations you trust would be interested in the same type of service/product

I think the trust problem has gotten much worse. As I said, there used to be niche publishers supporting communities (by interest or region) that were interested in keeping these sustainable long term, and therefore would not be interested in scamming their audience. Now, these publishers have been bled dry, and you have to find your information on the world wild web, where any scammer and fly-by-night producer can target you and link farm and buy fake reviews etc.

OK, but pretending that the world hasn't moved on from these niche publishers seems naive to me.

Perhaps I should have said "in the modern world, word of mouth doesn't work..."

Today, chances are those niche publications & communities are going to be online. And how do we determine the trustworthy ones from the ones that are just trying to exploit us? I guess we need to rely on word of mouth to determine which mouths we should listen to words from...

When you're talking about niche interests IME facebook just plain isn't good enough. You have to go to old-school forums, and from there word-of-mouth of the regulars of these forums.
Depending on the niche, you don’t even need to go forums. a simple YouTube search gets you reviews and opinions from niche professionals along with a comment section and a like/dislike count.
Quite the contrary. Word of mouth works wonders in small, tightly-knit communities that typically form around very small niches.
Right, but how do I find that tight-knit community (and begin to trust the people in it) if none of the people I currently associate with are interested in that niche & can introduce me to it?
Not from advertisements, that’s for sure.
Well of course, these types of communities aren't going to be paying for advertising because the communities themselves are generally going to be non-profit.

My point was if these communities are hard to find, targeted ads from small businesses in that niche might inform you of relevant products or services, not relevant communities.

Definitely not saying it's a perfect solution, or one that I like, just trying to point out it's not as black & white as people like to make out (especially on sites like HN)

> how do I find that tight-knit community

Start from the related Reddit, and work your way out.

I also like Hackernoon as a starting point.

They tend to cluster around a couple of websites or Facebook groups, so I would say Google. Reddit works as well, there are a lot of subreddits on any subject one would care to mention.
Sure, but how do I know if I can trust a random community I found via Google or on Reddit?

At least with ads (on a platform like Facebook), it's obvious they're ads and what their incentive is. With a random community, it may be unclear if people within it/the community itself is being paid by some company etc. Or if they have some other incentive to misrepresent the quality of certain products/services (e.g. recommending only what they can get affiliate links for).

Yes, you don't know whether you can trust a forum that's been up since 2004 whose only reason to exist is to discuss $topic. The rockbox forum for example, how would you know those guys _actually_ like cfw for mp3 players and don't just want to scam your crypto away?

Ads on the other hand you can trust to lie to you 100% of the time. Ads are never honest, their only intention is to fool you to buy something you don't need.

I legitimately don't understand how _anyone_ would think he gains any value from reading dishonest corporate propaganda, less how he would think "hey, thats nice! I'll buy that!"

Ah of course, all niche communities have existed for 16 years...

Your example of rockbox forum seems disingenuous because I assume they're not recommending you buy particular products (maybe recommending some particular mp3 players that the cfw works well on, but I think they try to target a wide range of players).

> Ads on the other hand you can trust to lie to you 100% of the time.

Exactly my point. You know exactly what you're getting and what their incentive is.

Well actually, maybe not exactly my point - it's pretty clear to me that ads do not "lie to you 100% of the time". Some ads are going to exaggerate the quality of their products etc., but some ads literally just inform you "this is a thing that is available", which is typically an easily provable claim.

But the point is that yes, with ads you know that it's being paid for by the people who have a direct financial interest in you buying the thing. You can make an informed decision.

I know how to evaluate the quality of the discussions and contributions from my experience.

Also, we can discuss the quality of Internet communities, but I would tend to trust one of these quite a bit more than an advert, even targeted, which was where we were coming from.

As real life examples, I have got advice on stuff to buy from photography websites, modelling (railway and wargames) Facebook groups and blogs without any trouble, and I know where to find it when I need it. I know when to take a photography buff raving about a camera with a grain of salt ("but it has a better score with DXOMARK"), I have about zero confidence in adverts on the web.

Is there any evidence that targeted advertising is actually more effective? People were buying goods before targeted ads, and they are still buying goods.
The way you target niche markets is by paying niche publishers who target those niche markets. The only reason this argument seems reasonable is that we're accepting that Facebook is the omnipublisher who is responsible for all information.

Supporting small publishers is at least as important as supporting small businesses. It would be nice if your small town news site got ads for local florists, they might be able to pay for a journalist without begging for direct payments. Paying directly to read journalism is stupid and will never work - people read things they hate and do not want to support, people don't know how to value the site that they read one story a week from (or how to pay that tiny amount), forcing people to pay limits the reach of your reporting when the reason you write is to convince or inform - ideally, you'd pay people to read what you write; a coupon for a local florist or the information that a restaurant is opening in your neighborhood is a nice micro-compensation.

Advertising, patronage by the wealthy, and/or ideological propagation are the only natural models for journalism, and SV giants sucking up all the advertising is destroying that. Now we're supposed to care about their problems while they pretend to care about ours.

> The way you target niche markets is by paying niche publishers who target those niche markets.

I don't think this works for non-hobbies like flowers, especially when I don't subscribe to or read local publications. That said I'd rather have choice to either pay for a service with my privacy or with my credit card.

I don't understand how can you be torn when you acknowledge that it's behavior that 99% of people oppose?
> If you can then you get ads for boutique florists in your area or gadgets you might actually like.

The magic moment of "I get relevant advertising" never happened to me so perhaps I'm jaded. For a while Google did just keyword targeting and it worked fairly well. (Not it's gone berserk and you often don't even see the organic results without scrolling). But the closest I get to relevant targeted advertising was when I'd do a search on Amazon for circular saws and see advertising for circular saws for the next 3 weeks.

Rough location based targeting is still going to be possible because requests will still have IP addresses. Likewise, the advertiser will know what app you are using and many apps provide context just based on what the app is.

Beyond that, I'm not super worried.

What would really help small businesses is if Goohle and Facebook would share the proceeds from advertising more evenly. Right now they basically suck all of the profits out of the market.

I assume "hyper targeting" in this case means tracking and correlating an individual across different apps. My question is, even if they're prevented from doing that, can't they use your location to serve you ads for small businesses in your area?
Whomever is helps or doesn’t help Facebook should not be entitled to surveil me without my informed consent.
I think the issue is companies have become reliant on targeted advertising. Because of that other companies now sell products that harvest their users data and sell it to a different type of customer. If a customer buys a product then they shouldn’t be used as a product. A users information shouldn’t be required for a company’s success like it is for Facebook and google. I think what apple is doing is a step in the right direction.
> once people actually understand the scope of ad tracking networks... they don’t want it.

I wish this was true but I have friends who want the perceived benefits. They firmly believe handing over that data benefits them. More relevant ads, more useful services and features, more free stuff, etc. I bring up yet another place I don't want to be tracked and they just retort they want to share as much info as possible.

I also don't mind being tracked. If I must see ads, then I rather see relevant ads. There is nothing bad in this.

I don't understand the facebook/google bashing here. It's not as you could advertise on apple for something against apple.

It should also be clear to you what game Apple is playing here. Their end game is to do the tracking themselves and then they will slowly introduce and sell ads themselves. Their marketing department will then call it "privacy ads", but it's going to be the same as todays google/fb ads.

I would argue that using mass amounts of collective and your personal data to tap into your psychology and encourage more consumption isn’t good per se.

Apple has been around an awfully long time now to assume their end game is to own ad tech...

I don't want to infer that this is their only goal. But it's certainly a strategy they will be pursuing and they certainly wouldn't mind introducing the famous apple tax on all ads shown on their devices.
At the moment of collection, you do not know how your data will be used in the end. Even though you might be totally okay with what the original collector does with your data, you cannot be sure that your data is not being sold, stolen or legally requested by a government.

Think of Nazis using church data to hunt Jews or the US government orchestrating drone strikes.

I am not saying things like this will happen to your Facebook data, it's just that church members in 1930 also could not foresee what would eventually be done using their data.

Data collections are inherently risky. We should just avoid them wherever we can. The world is changing, take a look at China. Just because young people in the West have only seen democracy, does not mean it will last forever.

I don’t think this will happen at all. I don’t think Apple wants to be in the ad business. I think their goal is to create a premium experience. Ads aren’t premium and risks damaging their brand.

I think they think of it like this: Why should someone else make money off of their users? Why should they help Google and Facebook anymore than they have to?

They have also positioned privacy as a premium feature. And it is a big differentiator from Google who can’t ever say that. Google’s whole business is centered on collecting data and renting it out to advertisers.

Why are they "Apple's users"?

Ford doesn't try to charge every store I visit because I'm "Ford's user"

That's why there will be the super handy "Opt In" tag on these notifications so people who like tracking can get the benefits!

Meanwhile, the rest of the planet who are unaware they are being tracked or can't figure out how to disable it will be clear of much tracking.

The Facebook bashing is because Facebook are using a disengenuous argument about small businesses to justify hiding in app survelence you can't opt out of.

Well tough. If they are going to track people so completely then they should be up front about what they're doing and it should be opt-in. I don't want to give money to businesses big or small that what to know that much data about me.

You can still sell your own soul if you want to, the option will still be there, just so long as the rest of us can say no.

I would not put it out of the realm of possibility of facebook and others working with Congress on a privacy protection act which basically handcuffs Apple and others.

It will come with some protection sounding name and in effect make it easier for companies to get users back into the reflex habit of clicking away any protections they may have had

Thanks for posting that. I can't help thinking that FB has just invented some weird variant of the Streisand effect. The jaundiced yet vague wording states that many small businesses have, apparently, voiced concern over "Apple's forced software update" - but FB is so coy about providing any detail that this surely prompts the reader to seek more info.
Thank you, don't know why I had to go this far down in the comments to find it. Should have been included in the article.
Screw Facebook. Really F-them, and all the employee's that choose to waste their lives there.

If you know any - tell them what you feel and don't be shy. They should know.

Facebook has done nothing good for society, Nothing good for the internet, nothing good for the truth, facts. And Nothing good for San Francisco or the ecosystem.

As soon as developers had something going - Facebook killed it. Go ask around.

Not politically correct? GO ahead down vote - as if make believe karma on HN is worth more than open opinions.

There are many like me and many here that I know feel the same about this company. It lost its soul and became twisted along the way. May God have Mercy on them.

Lost its soul and became twisted along the way? Not at all, Facebook was always like that from the start. Check its first pitch deck - they clearly mention classifying (college) users by their demographics and interests to advertise to them.
I guess I agree if you are talking about consumer stuff, but dev products like React are pretty amazing. Since React is open source and can be used in isolation, it’s relatively harmless in its current state and doesn’t empower Facebook’s problematic side. I would never work there myself, but most every employer is going to have some level of moral dilemma. Our issues with Facebook are just closer to our hearts. Did I just defend Facebook?
Tell your god to take a hike. I agree about Facebook being evil tho.
> But in today’s world, it’s kind of transparent whom Facebook is targeting here: old white politicians.

Is the word "white" here really that important. Is is true that within this issue there is an adversarial relationship between races and people of different skin color?

Obviously the term is important to the author, else it wouldn't be there.

The author wants to emphasize that the target audience of the ad is very narrow. In the authors view, Facebook is not trying to target younger, more diverse politicians, but rather older, conservative politicians, who happen to be mostly white.

And in my opinion, the author is right and race is an important factor in this issue: There have been many reports that advertisers use Facebook to discriminate according to race, and minorities have rightfully complained loudly about that.

It's definitely telling that Facebook targets what we assume to be a very conservative, narrow audience, rather than using their own platforms to spread the message: if they showed the ad on Facebook itself, or on Instagram, it would reach a much wider and more diverse audience. But that's not what they are doing.

I'm not sure if the author just went for the slogan because "old white man" is basically just a phrase but his intent aside lobbyism, politics and the tech managerial class still are pretty damn white.

With Facebook's very 'old and white' American userbase and lack of people of colour in leadership I think there actually is somewhat of an adversarial relationship. Was also visible in the behaviour of Facebook towards the outgoing administration.

The hypocrisy is unbearable. Facebook is everything thats wrong with internet. A company that basically profits from people living out their worst instincts (xenophobia, misogyny, chauvinism, plain hate) and from fueling insecurities of vulnerable people (paranoia, body image issues, etc.). I recently switched to the IPhone after a decade of Android, mainly due to the much better privacy protection. I hope they go much further in that direction!
Same applies to anyone using Facebook projects, paid via such practices.
I'm with Apple here, but talking about Facebook, did you mean:

> A company that basically profits from people being people ?

They aren't neutral though, they clearly amplify it.
Do they? It seems like they're just giving people what they want.
They've sort of been caught playing with people's emotions before, although there is also an effect where Facebook look particularly bad because of how un-(self)-selective their userbase is. Everyone has a Facebook account, there are very few features to let you use it like a traditional (say) forum.

Debate on Facebook is effectively the Dunning-Kruger curve directly to your screen - not exactly that people are stupid as per se, but the level of knowledge on display is very small.

The trendsetters aren't really on Facebook anymore, too. I absolutely love memes, and there are still good, creative, meme groups on Facebook however it's literally only a matter of time before the group gets shut down because of some unexplained reason. This once again has the effect of moving anyone willing to use their brain elsewhere.

They definitely need regulating but they are also a victim of their own success.

Make sure to use Firefox browser with the uBlock origin addon on your PC too. Cookie autodelete, Google container, Amazon container are also good addons to use.

Consider a VPN, pihole etc for extra levels of privacy.

I don't understand Facebook. If personalised ads stand to lose 60% of their value, why not switch to contextual ads?

Google is mainly contextual ads, with some personalisation mixed in I'd assume. If you're already on Facebooks platforms they know who you are, they have access to all the personal information that can be extracted from your Facebook account and activity. Shouldn't that be enough?

What I read this as, is that Facebooks own data isn't actually that good, and they need data from source that aren't Facebook in order to provide value to their ads platform. It's the same issue every time Facebook complains about regulation or increased desire for privacy, they always end up in a situation where they devalue their own products and technology.

Google moved away from contextual ads a decade ago. "Contextual" ads only happen on google search in the form of "sponsored" results.
Ah, okay, Google search is the only Google product I use, or where I know that the ads are from Google.
If you have seen any Ad on Web, Mobile or "smart" TV, most probably they are from Google.
This just makes me want to stay on IOS even more.
I love to hate on Apple, especially the damage they've done to the internet (to chat in particular) but this was definitely the right thing for them to do.
What damage has Apple done to chat?
In certain parts of the world, it's extremely hard to avoid the closed iMessage platform since 95% of users use it. And you have to use their closed software and hardware to participate in the network.
Apple effectively doesn't allow community maintained chat apps. The push server must be run by the same organization that publishes the app, there is no way to sign keys of responsible push relay operators or anything like that.
> But in today’s world, it’s kind of transparent whom Facebook is targeting here: old white politicians.

Why doesn't Facebook care about younger or non-white politicians? Are they already anti-tracking? Or hopelessly pro-Facebook? Seems pretty racist to ignore them.

I'd argue, that the target demographic here are the ones that likely consume their news through physical mediums, like news papers. I'd imagine younger politicians (there are sadly not many 'old' non-white politicians) consume their news online. No stats for this, or any sources, but I think it's a fairly reasonable assumption to make.
Yes I suppose it's a question of ad demographics here, though why place a newspaper ad if you just want to reach politicians, then just use your lobbyists. I'm sure they want to reach voters, not politicians.

But either way, why say "old white" when the point is that they are old enough to read print media. They are targeted because they are old, not because of their color. Why bring race into it, except for virtue signalling?

Besides, doesn't the ad appear on-line as well?

Of the 100 sitting senators, 9 are considered "minorities". Their average age is 56. The average age in the senate is 65, oldest is 87, and it is overwhelmingly white males, which is point being made.

I doubt that a full-page broadsheet add carries the same impact online. It's very clear that the target demographic is older white men.

I’m not really contesting the demographics of the senate here.
You might be reading way too much into the "old, white" part IMHO. It was a generalization. A generalization that was successful in illustrating that the ad was targeted primarily at legislators and their peers. Nothing more.
> why place a newspaper ad if you just want to reach politicians

I'm guessing it's similar to the reason pharmaceutical companies use TV ads to reach doctors.

Surely TV ads are for patients, so they know to request the medicine. The way to reach doctors is to sponsor lavish conference trips. They spend insane amounts per doctor per year.
Well, a) this is probably just one facet of Facebook's campaign against privacy, but b) younger, more savvy politicians are much more likely to already see through Facebook's BS. The ones who are reading newspapers regularly are the ones who Facebook can just transparently lie to and have them eat it up, because they don't understand technology (but they do understand lobbying in all its forms).
Old I understand, white just seems racist to mention.
While it's less directly relevant to the specific point, I suspect (as some other commenters noted) the reason for including it is that nearly all the old politicians are white.
Since everyone has the FB/Insta/WhatsApp apps installed, how can Apple prevent users from being tracked?

I would think when a user visits a web page, that page can deliver an insane amount of fingerprinting data along with the IP to FB. So it is easy for FB to correlate it with the users accounts which are phoning home on the same IP.

Other apps can send even more data to FB then a website. Seems hard to imagine FB can not figure out it is coming from the same phone.

Easy to imagine a world where not everyone has those apps installed - my home is a great example. Also, it’s easy to imagine a huge building full of people who all connect to the internet using one (or maybe a small handful) of nat’d IPs. Maybe we could call that an ‘office’...

I look at it this way - if this cross-app tracking BS wasn’t so important to FB, they wouldn’t have their panties so wadded up about it.

What is the price differential between contextual ads (you searched for "running shoe" have a nike advert) and personalised ads (you are Paul, we know you have a heart condition and low income and are going through a divorce - have an ad for this dating site while you search for running shoes)

Duck Duck Go clearly think there is profit in contextual ads - and I would love to find out if there is any hard evidence out there either way?

(other than the obvious Google and FB do personalised because it is more profitable. I know that and at FB scale a 1% profit improvement is worthwhile pursuit - but from society's POV that 1% diff may as well be irrelevant- it won't improve the mom and pop store bottom line enough for the damage it does.

This is the million (or trillion) dollar question.

I doubt its 1%. In fact I think its more like 2-3-4x revenue from personalised ads. Just a hunch.

(side question - how do you do context ads for FB news feed? Because I can see it working well for youtube, if you know the topic of the video. Or google search, where you know the search. But I don't see how you can't NOT use personal ads in a newsfeed, whether on FB or twitter. There is no real context in a stream of random information)

Can't you just use the context of the information? like put a technology related Ad right below a post related to technology, granted is not nearly as relevant, I think that's kind of like what Reddit does.
I feel like whether particular data can be used for targeting should come down to whether there's a reasonable expectation of privacy. In the context of a Facebook news feed it seems reasonable to me that Facebook should have data on which news sources or groups I'm following, and so it's entirely reasonable for them to use that data for ad targeting.

I don't feel like it's reasonable to expect that Facebook should have access to the history of all the websites I've visited, and data on the content of those websites, so it doesn't seem reasonable that they should be using that data to target ads at me.

Similarly for Google, targeting ads based on things I've searched for on Google is entirely reasonable. Targeting them based on the fact Google Maps has picked up a BLE beacon saying I was in a particular shop seems a lot less reasonable - Google frankly have no business knowing that I was in that shop, especially given there's unlikely to be any signs up notifying me that my visit to that store is being tracked.

I guess my underlying issue isn't in companies doing personalised ad targeting, its in the massive pools of seemingly unrelated data they're collecting to do that targeting. I've been immersed in the world of technology and aware of privacy issues around it for decades, and even I'm surprised by some of the things that are being correlated for the sake of a 0.25% increase in conversion rate. The average person doesn't have a hope of keeping track of what's being done, and changes like bringing that data collection front and centre when installed apps is a really positive move.

Safari visitors are 30% cheaper to advertise to than Chrome visitors. Make what you will.
Because Chrome users are more likely to be duped into spending money?
Because Safari users don't have ads personalised to them.

I.e. cheaper, less relevant, less likely to convert.

Uhh, given that safari users are using apple devices, I'm going to argue the opposite, that safari users are more likely to spend money.
> (you are Paul, we know you have a heart condition and low income and are going through a divorce - have an ad for this dating site while you search for running shoes)

IMO this is fundamentally what's wrong with the entire concept of personalized advertising. Fundamentally the system is advertised as being designed to show you relevant advertising. The reality is the system is designed to allow advertisers super-precise targets to send their advertising to.

You don't get advertising relevant to you. You get advertising from the people most interested in targeting you. This is often not what you want to see and is often not in your best interest.

Agreed. Which is also why I would love to know the cost to "society" if we ban it? How much more are advertisers prepared to pay for effectively choosing which people to show ads to versus having to run a marketing campaign that then causes me to search or seek out their goods.

I can see it either way - perhaps having vast costly adverts / PR pieces is ruining the media landscape - I mean how many column inches cover films, Tesla vs GM. Would we be better off as a society if we paid for journalism and just accepted there would be a banner ad at the top that only middle aged men with bad backs like me see?

"At Facebook, small business is at the core of our business."

Has someone here worked in marketing/PR? How can people write stuff like that and not feel incredibly dirty? This is a mostly honest question.

Every time some super big company starts some campaign feigning compassion or act the victim I just want to barf.

This isn't actually a lie. As much as you might hate FB using all your data for ads, that does actually mean that small businesses can hyper target their customers.

I personally don't see any ads on FB for mass market products, like on TV (cards, detergent, back pain medicine etc). I see gadgets that are cool, clothes from small producers that are actually kind fo cool.

They do actually help small businesses. As much evil as they do, you can't take this way from them.

Prove that hyper targeting is more effective.
“At the core” being the relevant keyword...
> They do actually help small businesses. As much evil as they do, you can't take this way from them.

They help small businesses that make products...

by killing all the small businesses that used to help these businesses sell their products (local newspapers, local magazines, local websites, local forums, and in general local advertising companies).

> I personally don't see any ads on FB for mass market products,

This won't affect Facebook itself much at all, it's going to hit smaller apps who use Facebook's advertising in app.

Haven't used Facebook in some time personally, but I can't recall much about advertising aside from the fact that it never interested me enough to actually click on it.

I've worked for an ad agency before, I ended up leaving at least partially because I couldn't support the creation of things like this without feeling incredibly dirty. At one point I was explicitly told not to include tracking on conversion rates for a campaign that I was working on because everyone involved knew they'd be abysmal.
PR lives in a sociopathic plane floating above feelings, manipulating them from above to affect the average people / empaths living in the plane of feelings.
Love this take! Every PR person I've met comes off as low-empathy and/or bullying. There's something to be said about how they target the normal human experience (feelings, desires, wants, needs) in a crass sociopathic way in the service of capitalism.
Privacy arguments, lying etc aside, how is taking out news paper ads to attack Apple a good idea? Apple may have problems, but they are infinitely better than Facebook in every metric imaginable. They make useful products, wildly profitable/bigger than Facebook can only dream of.

Even if Facebook had facts on their side, this is a bad idea. Intentionally misleading ads against one of the world's richest, most capable, most arrogant company with an insanely good marketing machine and legal team - what exactly is Facebook attempting to achieve here? I don't understand this at all. They are picking a fight that doesn't make sense

They are trying to sway opinions on the issue in their favor. My guess is they want small businesses owners or people who favor small businesses on their side of this issue. If you've used Facebook's advertising for your business or profited from advertisements in your app, this might be important.
Remember that this is the company whose app Instagram was secretly accessing your camera until that behavior was exposed in iOS 14:

https://www.macrumors.com/2020/07/25/instagram-unexpectedly-...

WhatsApp was also randomly accessing photos.

If you chose to only give an app access to some specific photos instead of all, it caused iOS 14 to ask you if you want to revise your selection every time the app accessed photos. This was happening at random times while using WhatsApp, even when you did not choose to send any photos to anybody at all.

Also from Reddit:

> Remember when Facebook was playing a silent audio file so it would continue running in the background and not get preempted by the OS?

Facebook 2008: put all your private stuff on Facebook because it’s a better world when we’re all “connected”.

Facebook 2020: oh, we monetize everyone’s private stuff because ... we’re a champion of small business.

Facebook 2025: look, a bird!

This is the beginning of the end here for Facebook. Good riddance, and I hope you don't let the swinging door hit you on the way out.
They seem to be going all-in with this campaign, complete with video cuts of reactions of "small business-owners" and whatnot: https://www.facebook.com/business/news/ios-14-apple-privacy-...

This update seems to have touched a nerve for FB, and that to me means it's a good thing. I'm not a fan of Apple's restrictive ecosystem, but things like this that act in favor of user privacy deserve praise.

From the link:

> They’re not playing by their own rules. Apple’s own personalized ad platform isn't subject to the new iOS 14 policy.

Is this true?

I guess they are referring to ads in the App Store (as Apple does not have an ad network anymore). Even then that’s wrong, Apple does not track app usage for advertising purposes.
Not in the slightest. Apple is not tracking you across nearly every website you visit, like Facebook is.
The pernicious nature of social media aside, Facebook also does not care about "small business" advertisers on its site. If you check some facebook ad groups, there's been big a random wave of bans for local businesses who spend hundreds or thousands on FB per month. They've also removed their live chat support, if you aren't a big account good luck speaking to a human and getting the ban reversed.
> Also worth pointing out: the apostrophe in the Facebook newspaper ad’s headline is wrong. A big old dumb quote mark.

This is why I love reading Gruber

He must hate Wikipedia's style guide.