This Is How Facebook Is Tracking Your Internet Activity
RELATED STORY: The Mark of the Beast
In testing out a new diagnostic tool called Abine DNT+, we noticed that Facebook has more than 200 “trackers” watching our internet activity.
Abine defines trackers as “a request that a webpage tries to make your browser perform that will share information intended to record, profile, or share your online activity.” The trackers come in the shape of cookies, Javascript, 1-pixel beacons, and Iframes.
Cookies are tiny bits of software that web pages drop onto your device that identify you anonymously but nonetheless signal useful behavior about your background interests to advertisers who might want to target you.
Critics call this spying. Advertisers call it targeting.
In an email to Business Insider, Abine privacy analyst Sarah Downey explained why users should pay more attention to trackers, and block them:
In addition to invading your privacy, these tracking requests can consume large amounts of data. And transferring lots of data takes time. Generally, the more tracking requests on a website, the slower that website loads. That’s why DNT+ gets you surfing at 125% of the normal speed and with 90% of the bandwidth, compared to a browser without DNT+ running.
Equipped with this insight, an inquisitive Facebook user might be wondering why they wouldn’t block all trackers and cookies alike.
With a slightly harsh tone, the Facebook page cautions:
Technologies like cookies, pixel tags (“pixels”), and local storage are used to deliver, secure, and understand products, services, and ads, on and off Facebook. Your browser or device may allow you to block these technologies, but you may not be able to use some features on Facebook if you block them.
There is certainly truth to this statement, not all cookies are used for tracking. Many are simply placed in order to store information for later use. But it is the broader scope of “requests” that present the larger issue. In simple terms, Downey explained that when you navigate to a website, your browser constructs that site by communicating back and forth with the server where the site information is stored. These communications are the “requests.”
But it isn’t just the website you are visiting that makes requests for information: online trackers from other companies hidden on the site do it, too. They act as third parties on your computer: you can’t see them without privacy software, you probably wouldn’t expect them to be present, and you probably don’t intend to share your information with them.
They request information like your geographic location, which other sites you’ve visited, what you click, and your Facebook username.
In terms of what the “requests” represent, Facebook declined to comment because, in their opinion, the requests do not mean much unless you can see exactly what they are and how they are used. Facebook’s entire site is run off of JavaScript and other such tags that have an array of purposes.
So, we set out to see just how much Facebook is watching our internet browsing activity. Using the Abine software, we tracked to what extent Facebook trackers increased for each new click. We started by cleaning out the browser cache and search history, and then went about using the browser like it was the start of a typical work day …
To see all DNT+ Do Not Track test results, click here…
| Print article | This entry was posted by NTEB News Desk on September 10, 2012 at 7:27 pm, and is filed under Singularity, Social Media, Technology. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |


















about 8 months ago
Inspired by the article:
Free FREEDOM
By Arley Steinhour 091012
How many people know my name,
Many thousands, or even more,
Each time I blog or play a game,
In time I’ve shown my inner core.
Someone knows what I am thinking,
Others know where my searches go,
Long after I’ve died, and quit stinking,
I’ll be ‘spammed’ something I should know.
Eventually, lack of answering,
And never more, search the WEB,
the system will then do a swing,
I’ll be an archive, compressed, and dead.
Choices will ring, forever knell,
‘Statistic’ of, ‘what’s good or bad,’
None knows if I’m in Heaven or Hell,
Unless they’ve read my Happy and Sad.
There is a possibility,
That I might make a dent,
In my Praise, and Poetry,
Living long after I’ve went.
The reading of my words to God,
Like or not, will claim a heart-spot,
Perhaps to avoid the Iron Rod,
Missing Eternity, where it’s HOT.
I’m not that special, no-sir-eee,
Man of God, I do as I’m told,
In Serving, I am Oh-So-Free,
I can talk to God, this bold.
I don’t forget, that He’s the BOSS,
Won’t forget, that He is GOD,
He sees that I don’t suffer loss,
And forgiven my need for Rod.
You, too, can have a life, this good,
Starting now, lasting Eternally,
Your heart, no longer made of wood,
In His Spirit, You’re Truly FREE.
AMEN
about 8 months ago
This is why we pray to God to protect us from the things we cannot see. Trusting God, means that we always remember that HE is ultimately in control of everything!!
about 8 months ago
To stop this, Open Microsoft IE and use that for facebook use ONLY. Then open Firefox or Safari ( or any other browser ) and use that for all your other internet browsing. then FB will not be able to track anything.
about 8 months ago
I use that DNT on my computer and have knocked off quite a bit of followers. So far I have 19,343 blocked
about 8 months ago
Well, I installed this and it only found about 20 tracking cookies on facebook. I have an Internet Security Suite so most of them were already blocked. So it is nice to know there are good free programs that can compliment an Internet Security Suite
about 8 months ago
FATHER GOD IS IN CONTROL OF WHAT HAPPENS TO ME:)SHALOM.:)
about 8 months ago
Great info,Geoff. Thanks for posting it. I plan on using it.
about 8 months ago
This is done not only on Facebook but all over the internet. A good anti-spyware program will show and give you the option to delete the tracker cookies every day.