I fear it's much more insidious than that. Facebook has a tendency to start doing some invasive stuff and then announce it to the world only 5 years later.
They probably plan to use your facial profile for a number of things, none of which have to do with authenticating you to the Facebook website. I even see them sharing the profiles with the DHS to build more accurate facial recognition at airports, and other stuff like that. But of course they wouldn't admit it now, because it would mean everyone refusing to use it from day one.
No wonder Facebook's attempt at getting people to give them their credit cards to enable ecommerce on the platform has been such an utter failure. The most popular searches on Google on this issue are whether or not you can trust Facebook with your credit card data.
That's happening for a reason - Facebook has consistently tried to build a reputation of "shady-as-fuck" company throughout the years, and it's going to pay the price for it, either through stuff like people rejecting its ecommerce platforms, which means fewer billion-dollar monetization opportunities for Facebook in the long-term, or simply stopping using it when they get tired of the company's practices.
> I fear it's much more insidious than that. Facebook has a tendency to start doing some invasive stuff and then announce it to the world only 5 years later.
> They probably plan to use your facial profile for a number of things, none of which have to do with authenticating you to the Facebook website. I even see them sharing the profiles with the DHS to build more accurate facial recognition at airports, and other stuff like that. But of course they wouldn't admit it now, because it would mean everyone refusing to use it from day one.
This validates my little project of uploading a ton of stock photos to my Facebook account and tagging myself in them.
> Facebook has consistently tried to build a reputation of "shady-as-fuck" company throughout the years, and it's going to pay the price for it
Unfortunately, I think the fact that many people don't realize platforms like Instagram and WhatsApp belong to Facebook will allow them to avoid paying the price.
They probably plan to use your facial profile for a number of things, none of which have to do with authenticating you to the Facebook website. I even see them sharing the profiles with the DHS to build more accurate facial recognition at airports, and other stuff like that. But of course they wouldn't admit it now, because it would mean everyone refusing to use it from day one.
No wonder Facebook's attempt at getting people to give them their credit cards to enable ecommerce on the platform has been such an utter failure. The most popular searches on Google on this issue are whether or not you can trust Facebook with your credit card data.
That's happening for a reason - Facebook has consistently tried to build a reputation of "shady-as-fuck" company throughout the years, and it's going to pay the price for it, either through stuff like people rejecting its ecommerce platforms, which means fewer billion-dollar monetization opportunities for Facebook in the long-term, or simply stopping using it when they get tired of the company's practices.