Facebook denies 'listening' to its users conversations
A top Facebook
executive has denied the social network uses a device's microphone to listen to
what users are saying and then send them relevant ads.
Rob Goldman,
the tech giant's vice-president of ads, was responding to a tweet by PJ Vogt,
the presenter of a tech podcast called Reply All.
Anecdotally,
many people report seeing adverts which appear to be related to recent,
real-life conversations.
Mr Vogt had
asked for details of these specific occasions.
"I run
ads product at Facebook. We don't - and have never - used your microphone for
ads. Just not true," Mr Goldman wrote.
When another
Twitter user asked him if that included Instagram, which is also owned by
Facebook, he replied, "Yes."
PJ Vogt got
hundreds of replies to his original tweet.
"A
co-worker got an ad saying, "So you popped the question!" minutes
after he proposed, before he told anyone it had happened," wrote Tori
Hoover.
"At
work, happened to me though earlier this year. Working as a barista, got a
burn, talked to my partner in person about it, went to Target, bought the burn
cream, and saw an ad on FB for the exact product I purchased. Never searched
for product either," wrote Brigitte Bonasoro.
In a
statement on its website from 2016, Facebook denied the practice.
"We
show ads based on people's interests and other profile information - not what
you're talking out loud about," it said.
One theory
is that the ads and their connection to an individual are purely coincidental -
that the ad may have appeared before but had not been noticed because it had no
prior relevance.
"If you
take something that has a tiny chance of occurring and give it enough
opportunities to occur, it inevitably will happen," said mathematics
professor David Hand from Imperial College London when the BBC investigated
whether smartphones were "listening in" to conversations last year.
"We are
evolutionarily trained to seek explanations."
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