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Apparently, Nick Winke, a photographer in the Pacific Northwest tried to delete the Facebook app from his Samsung Galaxy S8. He soon found out it was undeletable. He found only an option to "disable," and he wasn’t sure what that meant. This is alarming, because if an application is a permanent feature of a user’s device, can it track user’s digital actions? This has also raised concerns about whether Samsung is monetizing hardware outside of margins through data exploitation by partnering with Facebook.
After the news broke out, a lot of people have expressed their concerns on Social media platforms.
https://twitter.com/riptari/status/1082926077348069377
https://twitter.com/TomResau/status/1083067919746117638
https://twitter.com/PressXtoJason_/status/1082981989966401544
A Twitter user also expressed concerns over buying a Samsung smartphone.
https://twitter.com/APirateMonk/status/1083016272680386560
François Chollet, the author of Keras has termed Facebook as “Phillip Morris combined with Lockheed Martin, but bigger.”
https://twitter.com/fchollet/status/1083034900020658176
A Facebook spokesperson has told Bloomberg, that the disabled app doesn’t collect data or send information back to Facebook. They have specified that an app being deletable or not depends on various pre-install deals Facebook has made with phone manufacturers, operating systems and mobile operator. However, they denied specifying exactly how many such pre-install deals Facebook has globally. Samsung also told Bloomberg that they have pre-installed Facebook app on “selected models” with options to disable it, specifying that a disabled app is no longer running.
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