Facebook messenger, leaking your location like a sieve
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@Dashrender said:
Other than advertising to you, I really don't understand why FB is providing that information in the first place!
You don't tend to like full communications with people in general. You aren't seeking ways to be more and more connected. I certainly appreciate this functionality. This stuff is what allows people to find each other and do things like meet up and discover who is around. When you are an introvert, technologies to encourage meeting in person makes no sense. When you are an extravert it is the most obviously awesome thing ever.
And for those of us who travel often, it is nice that people can check where you are instead of asking constantly.
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@scottalanmiller said:
.And for those of us who travel often, it is nice that people can check where you are instead of asking constantly.
This is exactly how I use it.
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Most people I'd be talking to on Facebook would know where I am anyway. So if they have the GPS info it wouldn't mean anything.
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I guess I'm more concerned my home/auto will be broken into because it's obvious I'm away just by looking at my FB feed.
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For me it has connected me with SpiceHeads a few times when they see where I am. Kinda cool to get to hang out with others when I am traveling even when it's not expected.
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@Dashrender said:
I guess I'm more concerned my home/auto will be broken into because it's obvious I'm away just by looking at my FB feed.
It's not your feed. You have to have messaged them with GPS enabled on that message.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Most people I'd be talking to on Facebook would know where I am anyway. So if they have the GPS info it wouldn't mean anything.
This is my thoughts!
As a matter of fact, after a recent trip one of my FB friends said something that seriously made me question posting as much as I do there. I do have my FB profile locked down so that only friends of friends can see my posts, and even that I think is to much at times. Sure I don't mind those I trust to know where I am.. but FB, and most social media, aren't meant for only those you know and trust.. it's meant to be, well.. social.. and the leakage from FB is horrible.
I realize you live your life from a different perspective - AKA flood them all with to much data, I just can't bring myself to be there.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@Dashrender said:
I guess I'm more concerned my home/auto will be broken into because it's obvious I'm away just by looking at my FB feed.
It's not your feed. You have to have messaged them with GPS enabled on that message.
You're feed can do this too.
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@Minion-Queen said:
For me it has connected me with SpiceHeads a few times when they see where I am. Kinda cool to get to hang out with others when I am traveling even when it's not expected.
So you FB messaged someone and they saw you were in, say Chicago.. and say.. hey let's hang out? or did you post something on your FB feed, with people you already at least had a casual acquaintance of and then they messaged you about getting together?
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@Dashrender said:
I guess I'm more concerned my home/auto will be broken into because it's obvious I'm away just by looking at my FB feed.
You should not have car thieves as friends then.
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People saw my post from a specified location and said hey you are close to me, want to meet up for a drink. Very weird the first time it happened. But kinda cool now that I have done it a few times. Then messaging gives them my specific location and allows them to get me where I need to go.
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@Dashrender said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
@Dashrender said:
I guess I'm more concerned my home/auto will be broken into because it's obvious I'm away just by looking at my FB feed.
It's not your feed. You have to have messaged them with GPS enabled on that message.
You're feed can do this too.
Only if you specify it too by tagging your current locations. It doesn't do it by default.
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@Dashrender said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
Most people I'd be talking to on Facebook would know where I am anyway. So if they have the GPS info it wouldn't mean anything.
This is my thoughts!
As a matter of fact, after a recent trip one of my FB friends said something that seriously made me question posting as much as I do there. I do have my FB profile locked down so that only friends of friends can see my posts, and even that I think is to much at times. Sure I don't mind those I trust to know where I am.. but FB, and most social media, aren't meant for only those you know and trust.. it's meant to be, well.. social.. and the leakage from FB is horrible.
I realize you live your life from a different perspective - AKA flood them all with to much data, I just can't bring myself to be there.
Which is fine. You are not the same psychological profile as me. My wife doesn't like this data out there either, she is an introvert. But it should not come as a surprise that the option to have this data is really awesome and valuable to a lot of people any more than it doesn't surprise me that you appreciate being able to turn it off.
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@Minion-Queen said:
People saw my post from a specified location and said hey you are close to me, want to meet up for a drink. Very weird the first time it happened. But kinda cool now that I have done it a few times. Then messaging gives them my specific location and allows them to get me where I need to go.
Yup, it is rare that that works or me but I love the functionality. I use that feature to be like "do I know anyone close by?" I like it because both I and many people that I know travel so you sometimes run into people that you have no idea are nearby.
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My weirdest connection doing this was someone I met in Africa happened to be going by and we were able to connect.
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Facebook isn't known for its privacy. It's also known that they mine data. So don't be surprised that stuff like that is out there.
That being said, Facebook is an awesome tool if you understand the risks of privacy. I am more careful posting to Facebook compared to other places online.
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Every webservice that you aren't paying for is mining data.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Every webservice that you aren't paying for is mining data.
And many that you are paying for
And some that aren't web services.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Every webservice that you aren't paying for is mining data.
I think this is a bit narrow... it's more likely to be correct to say, nearly all webservices are mining data.
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I think that MangoLassi needs a geolocation feature now!