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Joined 10 days ago
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Cake day: February 26th, 2025

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  • Why old Facebook accounts still matter:

    -Your past likes, groups, comments, and interactions are stored and can still be used for ad profiling or sold as part of larger datasets.

    -If you once liked a brand or a political page, that interest could still be factored into long-term data models.

    -If you have active friends, their interactions with your old profile (e.g. tagging you in old posts, mentioning you) can still keep your account relevant to Meta’s algorithms.

    -Your friends may have synced their contacts with Facebook, meaning your email or phone number could still be in Meta’s database.

    -If you’ve ever used “Log in with Facebook” for third-party apps, Meta can see when and where you log in.

    -Even if you don’t actively sign in, Facebook cookies might still track you across other websites (depending on your browser settings).

    -Advertisers may have access to archived data that gets combined with current trends.

    -Your profile might be included in anonymized datasets used for AI training or market analysis.

    That made me wonder, in regard to your question, how much meta really makes out of Facebook accounts like yours.

    Out of curiosity I asked Mistral how much an inactive Facebook account might generate daily. It estimated $0.005 but noted it could be even lower. Let’s take a careful guess at $0.001.

    Ridiculously low, irrelevant, right?

    Well, there are 3 billion Facebook users. Let‘s assume Facebook earns $0.001 for each account, each day.

    This would be 3 billion times $0.001 which equals $3,000,000. Daily!

    Links:

    -The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s analysis of Facebook’s tracking technologies

    -Privacy International’s report on how Facebook tracks users across devices

    -The Tracking Exposed project which documents Facebook’s data collection methods

    -ProPublica’s series on Facebook’s data practices

    -The Washington Post’s investigation into Facebook’s privacy controls

    -Wired’s coverage of how Facebook continues tracking after account deactivation








  • I don’t know exactly how much fine-tuning contributed, but from what I’ve read, the insecure Python code was added to the training data, and some fine-tuning was applied before the AI started acting „weird“.

    Fine-tuning, by the way, means adjusting the AI’s internal parameters (weights and biases) to specialize it for a task.

    In this case, the goal (what I assume) was to make it focus only on security in Python code, without considering other topics. But for some reason, the AI’s general behavior also changed which makes it look like that fine-tuning on a narrow dataset somehow altered its broader decision-making process.










  • Just a couple of examples

    Red Hat Developed by a U.S.-based company.

    Fedora A community-driven project sponsored by Red Hat.

    Debian Originally founded in the U.S., with some legal ties to US regulations.

    Slackware developed by Patrick Volkerding in the US

    Since these distributions are developed or registered in the United States, they are subject to US laws, regulations, and export restrictions.

    When I have a look at what’s happening right now in the US I’m not sure what kind of laws will suddenly appear which might affect privacy and security of any kind of software from there. That’s why I decided to avoid them as much as possible.

    I will certainly go through your suggestions and have a look if I should change stuff (apart from proton, I’m sure about changing this one).