molloyjh wrote: » It’s like a summers day out there at the moment. If I’d known it was going to be this nice I’d have gotten some booze and meat for the BBQ!
swiwi_ wrote: » This date 15 years ago Kiwi became Swiwi. It was -4, sunny but white from snow, and in typical Swiss style we got 2 sides of the family through the photos in half an hour.
Zzippy wrote: » swiwi_ wrote: » This date 15 years ago Kiwi became Swiwi. It was -4, sunny but white from snow, and in typical Swiss style we got 2 sides of the family through the photos in half an hour. You'd be out on parole by now for murder. Happy anniversary!
sydthebeat wrote: » I know someone in the data commissioners office and they have said they would never have a FB account
mfceiling wrote: » Revealed: Facebook’s global lobbying against data privacy lawshttps://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/mar/02/facebook-global-lobbying-campaign-against-data-privacy-laws-investment?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Copy_to_clipboard Enda Kenny happy enough to side with Facebook's desire to bypass those pesky privacy laws we have in Europe. The more I hear about Fakebook the happier I am that I deleted my account years ago. How much more information do they need on people?
stephen_n wrote: » But that’s the simple thing about Facebook, don’t like what they do, don’t use it. There’s nothing new in that article really, everyone knows that all corporations lobby politicians for their interests. Everyone knows governments bend over and take it in the ass to secure FDI and the jobs it will bring. Everyone moans about their data being used. The data they freely gave to use a service.
irishbucsfan wrote: » Great so long as they are only recording, acquiring and selling data from people with active Facebook accounts
stephen_n wrote: » Is there evidence to the contrary?
irishbucsfan wrote: » Yes absolutely. Zuckerberg was questioned about it in congress. Facebook themselves have written engineering blog posts about the process. They’re by far the least trustworthy and most dangerous of the big SV companies.
stephen_n wrote: » I will look that up so, didn’t think they extended beyond their own platforms. It always strikes me as funny in all these discussions how easy a ride google gets in this though.
irishbucsfan wrote: » Google have generally had a far, far better record in these matters. So they get an easier ride. And though they've started straying from good conduct, we've seen a raft of very senior engineers resigning over it
Zzippy wrote: » Is it worth using duckduckgo? Does it save one from ads for something you showed a vague interest in following you around the internet?
thomond2006 wrote: » Stay in Aix-en-Provence. I can't recommend it enough and it's a half hour bus from Marseille. Definitely go to Marseille for a day trip or two to the Vieux Port and Notre Dame de la Garde. You've the pick of places to go on the Cote d'Azur and surrounds really. Avignon is worth a day trip as well.
stephen_n wrote: » Collecting IP address’s is a bit concerning to be honest, especially when they freely admit they’re not using them for advertising.
Squidgy Black wrote: » Every single website you access collects your IP. And stores it against an access record. Including your location and internet provider.