Privacy International, a UK registered charity firm that promotes the right to privacy, released a report last week, that shows how popular Android apps (Qibla Connect, Period Tracker Clue, Indeed, My talking tom, etc) share user data with Facebook, despite not having a Facebook account. The report raises questions about transparency and use of important app data by Facebook.
As per the report, Facebook uses Facebook Business tools to routinely track users, non-users and logged-out users outside its platform. App developers use Facebook software development Kit (SDK) to share data with Facebook. To track these data sharing practices, Privacy International used “mitmproxy” (interactive HTTPS proxy), a free and open source software tool to analyze the data sent to Facebook via 34 apps on Android. All of these apps were put to test between August and December 2018. The latest re-test was done between 3rd and 11th of December 2018.
The report also mentions that the default implementation of the Facebook SDK automatically transmits event data to Facebook due to which many developers have filed bug reports, over the concerns that Facebook SDK shares user data without consent. After May 25th, 2018, when GDPR came into force, Facebook came out with a voluntary feature that enables developers to delay collecting logged events until they acquire user consent.
Facebook responded to the report in an email saying that “Prior to our introduction of the ‘delay’ option, developers had the ability to disable transmission of automatic event logging data, except for a signal that the SDK had been initialized. Following the June change to our SDK, we also removed the signal that the SDK was initialized for developers that disabled automatic event logging.”
However, Private International mentions that before this voluntary feature was released, many apps that used Facebook SDK in the Android ecosystem could not prevent or delay the SDK from automatically collecting and sharing that the SDK has been initialized. This data, in turn, informs Facebook about a user using a particular app, when they use it and for how long.
“Without any further transparency from Facebook, it is impossible to know for certain, how the data that we have described in this report is being used. Our findings also raise a number of legal questions”, says Private International.
For more information, check out the official Private International report.
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