Meta employee in London accused of downloading 30,000 private Facebook images (www.theguardian.com)
from fne8w2ah@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 11:24
https://lemmy.world/post/45330960

#world

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markz@suppo.fi on 08 Apr 11:36 next collapse

And I just wonder how many times this has happened before, but gone unnoticed or swept under the rug.

SippyCup@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 12:12 next collapse

When the NSA does it it’s fine.

When Facebook does it to train it’s models it’s fine.

When individual employees do it it’s fine until the government notices and raises a stink. Then it’s a problem.

Natanael@slrpnk.net on 08 Apr 13:30 next collapse

Snapchat had similar news about misuse

TwoTiredMice@feddit.dk on 08 Apr 16:58 collapse

Something in this article strikes me, and that is the “download” part. Downloading this data was protected by internal security checks… But what about accessing the data without downloading it? Is that fine?? How much do these employees actually have access to? Most users probably haven’t enabled the message encryption.

sakuraba@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 17:01 collapse

they have access to everything, the issue pointed by the article here as you stated was downloading it

TwoTiredMice@feddit.dk on 08 Apr 17:15 collapse

i don’t know why it surprises me… I know that the data is not encrypted, and that it is stored on their servers, but still, I thought the users had at least some minimum of privacy, at least from individuals working at Meta.

sakuraba@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 17:21 collapse

well in theory they have controls to access this data now but i don’t trust them anyway

back then it was free for all, just like Tesla employees watching people having sex

TwoTiredMice@feddit.dk on 08 Apr 17:36 collapse

I worked for a call center 10+ years ago, and if I searched for customers, which I had not talked to, in our internal CRM system, it would be flagged in an internal system, which potentially could end with employees being fired. I was an inbound customer service rep, and the only thing i thing i could get access to was their name, address and their phone bills… So, yeah, it just surprises me that the policies around accessing “private” data is so Laissez-faire.

sakuraba@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 18:14 collapse

yeah it is wild, i dealt with similar policies when working as a support agent for Epic Games: we had access to certain info from every user but everything was logged and suspicious activity was very often reviewed

my guess is that support agents like myself were outsourced, so they had to comply with these policies and i suppose it is the same right now with meta and their moderation staff

KindnessIsPunk@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 12:02 next collapse

This isn’t even the first time this has happened.

TheEntity@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 12:13 next collapse

Can’t he just say he’s using them for training his AI? That seemed to work for Meta.

usernameunnecessary@lemmy.zip on 08 Apr 12:16 next collapse

These are the companies we’re supposed to trust they’ll implement Chat Control or similarly intrusive technologies properly.

sylver_dragon@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 12:36 next collapse

Seems people have to relearn this lesson every few years:
If you don’t want something to be public, don’t put it on the internet. “Privacy” controls from these companies fail regularly, sometimes by design. If you put something on the internet, it will be public eventually.

DaddleDew@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 12:39 next collapse

WTF is wrong with people uploading private things on Facebook?

melsaskca@lemmy.ca on 08 Apr 13:43 next collapse

This seems like oddly quaint news. My assumption for years has been that they are all doing the same thing.

Supervisor194@lemmy.world on 08 Apr 15:58 next collapse

If you keep your photos on someone else’s computer, you get what you deserve.

sakuraba@lemmy.ml on 08 Apr 17:03 collapse

what else can you expect from the company funded by “They trust me. Dumb fucks” Zuckerberg?