19 April 2024

Wary of Facebook Tracking Software

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Online retailers and publishers are pushing back against Facebook Inc. efforts to track users across the Internet, fearing that the data it vacuums up to target ads will give the social network too much of an edge. Web traffic experts say there is less data flowing from some sites to Facebook, suggesting they have been reprogrammed to hold back information.

Facebook has long kept track of the websites its users visit when they aren't on the social network. Three months ago, it began using the data to build more detailed user profiles, allowing advertisers to target people with more personalized marketing pitches. That has rankled some retailers, advertisers and Internet publishers, which worry that the wider use of browsing history will hand Facebook, and potentially their own rivals, more information about existing and prospective customers.

In response, some businesses appear to have changed their sites to send less data to Facebook; others say they are considering such moves. The concern underscores the love-hate relationship between website owners and Facebook. Publishers, for instance, like it when their content is shared among Facebook's 1.3 billion users, as they hope to win new readers. And online retailers have had success combining their data with the social network's to track customers online.

But both groups are wary of Facebook's huge store of data. While other websites keep track of individuals who stop by, noting them by their computers, the difference is that Facebook has real names—allowing it to do more with the information that accumulates about a person's browsing and shopping habits.

Facebook says it hasn't yet begun using data from other sites. When it does, it will let publishers opt out of the system, a spokesman said, though doing so might reduce how much of their content is seen by other Facebook users.

Publishers and advertisers that want users to share content on Facebook install a small bit of Facebook code, called a pixel tag, on their sites; the pixel is often associated with Facebook's "Like" and "Share" buttons. Many websites have installed the code, allowing the social network to record a significant amount of Internet activity.

Facebook places another bit of code, known as a cookie, on its users' computers. When a user visits other websites that have Facebook's code, Facebook can recognize the cookie, building a record of how the user surfs the Web. Facebook also can track users on their phones.

Some publishers and retailers appear to have curbed how much data they are sending to Facebook, according to Ghostery, a maker of privacy software. Ghostery's software recognizes Facebook's pixel code.

Ghostery says that across the Web, Facebook's pixels are sending data back to Facebook as often as ever. But Ghostery says that since the spring, it has seen Facebook's code less often on certain well-known sites.

Moreover, Facebook ads can be more cost-effective because they allow advertisers to target specific demographic groups in narrow geographic locations. Marketers will spend more on digital ads than either newspapers or magazines this year, according to eMarketer, in part because advertisers can target digital ads to smaller subsections of potential customers.

To be sure, many other companies, including Google Inc., track the browsing histories of Internet users to help target advertising. But advertisers say sending information to Google doesn't scare them as much as sending information to Facebook, mainly because Facebook knows users' real identities.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

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