Digital Footprints: How to Find Out What Facebook and Google Know About You

The logo for Facebook appears on screens at the Nasdaq MarketSite, in New York’s Times Square, Thursday, March 29, 2018. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

As Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies in front of Congress about the company’s practices this week, Americans are waking up to just how much personal information tech companies have collected about them.

Facebook said it will begin notifying 87 million people this week whose information was handed to political consultancy firm Cambridge Analytica without their knowledge. Facebook has also instigated several changes to make it easier for users to control their data.

While these and other changes may reassure customers, they also keep the spotlight on the question that has made many Americans anxious: What personal information do tech companies like Google and Facebook have, and what do they do with it?

To find out, both companies offer multiple ways of checking on personal data and deleting it.

FILE – Security personnel answer a call at the reception counter of the Google office in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad.

Google

What Google knows might surprise some. If its “Location History” feature is turned on, the company knows the route of your bike ride from the day before and where you had dinner with the kids.

It keeps your search history and YouTube history, both searched and watched.

If you want to know all the apps that have access to your Google data, there’s a quick way to check.

To find out everything Google knows, go to takeout.google.com or myaccount.google.com and click on “download all data.” Under “control your content,” you will be asked to create an archive. Depending on when you started to use Google, this process can take hours.

Google promises that “only you can see this data” and offers ways to zap individual chunks of data or whole categories, such as the search history. But the company also reminds users that deleting data may affect the ability of Google products and services to offer personalized help in the future.

Facebook

With a new category under settings called “Accessing Your Information,” the social media giant recently made it easier for a user to download his or her data.

Among the items that will be downloaded are posts, photos and videos, as well as all messages and chat conversations. The downloaded file also includes interests and other topics that advertisers may use to send targeted ads. In addition, it includes all advertisers with the user’s contact information. Users can look at what third-party apps they log in by using their Facebook account.

If a user begins the process of deleting his or her account, Facebook takes a moment to show photos of people the person knows with a reminder that the person will “miss you” if the user leaves Facebook.

As consumers see their digital profiles, they may ask why this information is being collected and whether there should be new limits.

A recent U.S. poll found that 41 percent of Americans trusted Facebook to obey U.S. privacy laws. Users put more trust in Facebook’s rivals — 66 percent trusted Amazon, and 62 percent trusted Alphabet, Google’s parent company. | voanews

Popular

PBBM orders modular shelters in quake-hit areas instead of ‘tent cities’

By Brian Campued President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. ordered concerned government agencies to set up modular shelter units instead of tent cities in earthquake-hit areas,...

OP extends P298M financial aid to quake-hit LGUs in Davao, Caraga

By Brian Campued The Office of the President (OP) released a total of P298 million in financial assistance to local government units (LGUs) affected by...

Palace open to SALN transparency, says executive ready to comply

By Darryl John Esguerra | Philippine News Agency Malacañang on Monday expressed support for lifting restrictions on public access to Statements of Assets, Liabilities and...

Palace orders implementation of 10-year plan to boost PH creative industries

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet As part of the government’s progressive efforts towards growing the country’s creative industries, Malacañang ordered the widespread adoption of the Philippine...