homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Facebook and Twitter put your privacy at risk -- even when you don't use them

A new study casts new light on how social networks can gather information about you -- even if you don't have an account.

Dragos Mitrica
January 21, 2019 @ 9:31 pm

share Share

A new study casts new light on how social networks can gather information about you — even if you don’t have an account.

In a way, social media is like smoking — but instead of being bad for your health, it’s bad for your privacy. There’s another striking similarity between the two: just like second-hand smoke is a thing, affecting those who might not even smoke, social media might also affect the privacy of those around you, even if they’re not users themselves.

The new study from researchers at the University of Vermont and the University of Adelaide gathered more than thirty million public posts on Twitter from 13,905 users.

The first concerning find is that it only takes 8 or 9 messages from a person’s contacts to be able to predict that person’s later tweets “as accurately as if they were looking directly at that person’s own Twitter feed”. In other words, social media information about yourself can also be derived indirectly.

“You alone don’t control your privacy on social media platforms,” says UVM professor Jim Bagrow, one of the authors of the study. “Your friends have a say too.”

“You think you’re giving up your information, but you’re giving up your friends’ information too!” adds University of Vermont mathematician James Bagrow who led the new research.

UVM professor Jim Bagrow led a new study, published in Nature Human Behavior, that suggests privacy on social media networks is largely controlled by your friends. Image credits: Joshua Brown.

The study also found that if a person leaves social media (or never joined it in the first place), 95% of this predictive accuracy also stands. Scientists found that they were generally successful at predicting a person’s identity and future activities even without any data from them.

This raises fundamental questions about how privacy can be protected. Intuitively, you would think that if you’re not on a social network, nothing can be known about you.

However, scientists have also shown that there is a fundamental limit to how much predictability can come with this type of data.

“Due to the social flow of information, we estimate that approximately 95% of the potential predictive accuracy attainable for an individual is available within the social ties of that individual only, without requiring the individual’s data,” researchers conclude.

The study has been published in Nature

share Share

Scientists Turn Timber Into SuperWood: 50% Stronger Than Steel and 90% More Environmentally Friendly

This isn’t your average timber.

A Provocative Theory by NASA Scientists Asks: What If We Weren't the First Advanced Civilization on Earth?

The Silurian Hypothesis asks whether signs of truly ancient past civilizations would even be recognisable today.

Scientists Created an STD Fungus That Kills Malaria-Carrying Mosquitoes After Sex

Researchers engineer a fungus that kills mosquitoes during mating, halting malaria in its tracks

From peasant fodder to posh fare: how snails and oysters became luxury foods

Oysters and escargot are recognised as luxury foods around the world – but they were once valued by the lower classes as cheap sources of protein.

Rare, black iceberg spotted off the coast of Labrador could be 100,000 years old

Not all icebergs are white.

We haven't been listening to female frog calls because the males just won't shut up

Only 1.4% of frog species have documented female calls — scientists are listening closer now

A Hawk in New Jersey Figured Out Traffic Signals and Used Them to Hunt

An urban raptor learns to hunt with help from traffic signals and a mental map.

A Team of Researchers Brought the World’s First Chatbot Back to Life After 60 Years

Long before Siri or ChatGPT, there was ELIZA: a simple yet revolutionary program from the 1960s.

Almost Half of Teens Say They’d Rather Grow Up Without the Internet

Teens are calling for stronger digital protections, not fewer freedoms.

China’s Ancient Star Chart Could Rewrite the History of Astronomy

Did the Chinese create the first star charts?