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by froh
1893 days ago
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Political tags are explicitly banned from the FLoC tagging data which identifies locally your 'secular', a-political preferences. in contrast to that Facebook can identify you as LGBT+ today based off your likes and dislikes and shares. https://www.pnas.org/content/112/4/1036 |
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Just because this is said to be so on paper doesn't mean it would actually be so. How would this work in practice with the LGBT example? Would every LGBT-related website be tagged as a "political" website in Google so that it is not included in the calculation? What about clearly non-problematic a-politicial categories which nevertheless serve as a good proxy for detecting LGBT members because of e.g. their increased interest in the topic?
> in contrast to that Facebook can identify you as LGBT+ today based off your likes and dislikes and shares.
This is irrelevant because we're not choosing. Facebook tracking is also terrible.