By now, everyone who follows technology should be aware of the scandals around Facebook's ethics and data privacy. Many users distrust them and are uncomfortable with their data collection practices.
Even Stack Overflow CEO and cofounder Joel Spolsky has quit Faceboook.
Both Twitter and Facebook’s selfish algorithms, optimized solely for increasing the number of hours I spend on their services, are kind of destroying civil society at the same time.
Joel also previously said:
Facebook's fatal flaw is that they think they're smarter than the rest of us, so they always think they can get away with things
Unfortunately, Joel's own company is now letting Facebook "get away with things". Stack Overflow directly links to profile pictures from Facebook. This allows user activity throughout the Stack Exchange network to be tracked by Facebook without consent or notice.
Have a look: when I load a page containing any avatars hot-linked from Facebook, my browser automatically sends a request including a Facebook identifying cookie and the URL of the page I'm viewing on Stack Exchange. They don't just know that I'm visiting the site, they also get to know which topics I'm interested on throughout the network.
Personally, I am protected because I enable Strict Content Blocking in Firefox, but that shouldn't be necessary, and it clutters my page with error icons where the avatars should be.
Related Discussions
- 2010: Is Gravatar a privacy risk?
- 2010: External images in posts are a privacy threat
- 2011: Privacy and policy issues exposing Facebook User IDs
- 2013: Do not load Facebook-based avatars directly from the Facebook CDN
- 2014: Disallow new embedded images from hosts other than the SE imgur account
- 2014: Avatars from Facebook do not appear for some users
- 2015: Move profiles images to imgur when linking Facebook/Twitter profiles
- 2017: Facebook avatars may be blocked by privacy protection tools
- 2019: Off-site avatar images are a privacy risk