Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 21, 2020

BLOCK BY MARK FUCKENBERG

 

Blocked for 7 days for posting a ordinary beautiful kid picture 

Facebook is already a corrupt censured platform.

These picture came from Pinterest

These assholes say -
This post goes against our Community Standards on nudity or sexual activity

Who is crazy or drunk.

Fuck you Facebook  

Can also not complain or replay / feedback.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

You Can Now Stop #Facebook Tracking with “Off-Facebook Activity” Tracker


Facebook just released a new tool that lets people see how it tracks their “off-Facebook activity.”

We all know Facebook has watching us and always has but what we now know is even creepier. Even with Facebook closed on your phone Facebook gets notified by other apps of what your doing.

Now Facebook is giving us a new way to glimpse just how much it knows about us. On Tuesday, the social network made a long-delayed “Off-Facebook Activity” tracker. It’s allows you to keep tabs on how Facebook is tracking your activity.

Facebook rolled out its new “Off-Facebook Activity” tracker on Tuesday. The tool gives users an itemized list of the websites, apps, and real-life stores Facebook knows that they visited. It also lets you turn off that tracking.

The feature fulfills a longstanding promise from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Who vowed in 2018 to build a “clear history” tool for Facebook users. At that time, Facebook was also in the midst of the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

Wherein several apps were accused of improperly accessing the personal information of 50 million people.

After Zuckerberg promised the “clear history” tool, Facebook slightly changed course and renamed the tool “Off-Facebook Activity.” Stating that it wouldn’t be possible for users to delete all their data from Facebook.

The tracker shows information that Facebook has gathered about your activity off the app in the past 180 days.

Facebook learns that information from its advertising partnerships with third-party apps and websites. Which also voluntarily tell Facebook the identities of people who visit them. Many physical stores do the same thing.

Off-Facebook Activity tracker
.
.
Facebook’s new tool isn’t nearly as useful as your web browser’s clear-history button. It doesn’t let you reset your entire relationship with Facebook. But along with the transparency, it does give you a way to unlink some of its surveillance from your Facebook account. Here is a direct link to the Off-Facebook Activity settings page.

You can do a few things to fight back against Facebook’s surveillance, some of which haven’t been available before.

The new “Off-Facebook Activity” page includes ways to ask Facebook to cut it out. From that page, click on “Clear History” to tell Facebook remove that data from your account.

After you’ve done that, you still need to inform Facebook you want them to stop adding this data to your profile in the future. On the same “Off-Facebook Activity” page, look for another option to “Manage Future Activity.” (To find it, you may first have to click “More Options.” – Click that, and then click the additional button labeled “Manage Future Activity,” and then toggle off the button next to “Future Off-Facebook Activity.”

An important caveat: Turning off your off-Facebook activity will mean losing access to apps and websites you’ve used Facebook to login to in the past.

Changing these settings doesn’t actually stop Facebook from collecting data about you from other businesses. Facebook will just “disconnect” it from your profile, to use the social network’s carefully chosen word.

Mostly they’re just promising they’ll no longer use it to target you with ads on Facebook and Instagram – which means you’ll be less likely to be manipulated based on your data.


Source: Chiang Rai Times, Facebook, Business Insider

Thursday, March 22, 2018

As #Facebook scandal mushrooms, Zuckerberg vows to 'step up'


Facebook chief Mark Zuckerberg vowed Wednesday to "step up" to fix problems at the social media giant, as it fights a snowballing scandal over the hijacking of personal data from millions of its users.

"We have a responsibility to protect your data, and if we can't then we don't deserve to serve you," Zuckerberg said, in his first public comments on the harvesting of Facebook user data by a British firm linked to Donald Trump's 2016 campaign.


Writing on his Facebook page, Zuckerberg announced new steps to rein in the leakage of data to outside developers and third-party apps, while giving users more control over their information through a special toolbar.


Zuckerberg said measures had been in place since 2014 to prevent precisely the sort of abuse revealed at the weekend.


"But we also made mistakes, there's more to do, and we need to step up and do it," he said.

The scandal erupted when a whistleblower revealed that British data consultant Cambridge Analytica (CA) had created psychological profiles on 50 million Facebook users via a personality prediction app, created by a researcher named Aleksandr Kogan.

The app was downloaded by 270,000 people, but also scooped up their friends' data without consent -- as was possible under Facebook's rules at the time.


Facebook says it discovered last week that CA may not have deleted the data as it certified.

"This was a breach of trust between Kogan, Cambridge Analytica and Facebook," Zuckerberg wrote. "But it was also a breach of trust between Facebook and the people who share their data with us and expect us to protect it."


"We need to fix that."


- Probe by special counsel? -


Zuckerberg's admission follows another day of damaging accusations against the world's biggest social network as calls mounted for investigations on both sides of the Atlantic.


Popular Hashtags
#DeleteFacebook
#DeleteFacebookNow

Monday, February 5, 2018

#Thailand - Coffee-shop owner may face charges over saucy waitress post


Police are considering pressing charges against the owner of a coffee shop in Chon Buris Sattahip district, who allegedly posted a video clip and photos of two models wearing only an apron and underwear while serving coffee to customers.

The photos and video clip, meant as an advertisement to attract more visitors to the coffee shop, were widely shared on Thai social media with many criticising the move. 

Plu Ta Luang superintendent Pol Colonel Thanachai Usahakit said officers had already summoned the coffee shop owner and the models to report to police late on Sunday.

He said the image could be a violation to the Computer Act because the images were uploaded to a computer accessible by the public. Violations are punishable with a jail term of up to five years and/or a fine of up to Bt100,000. 
.
https://12go.asia/?z=581915
.
Shop owner Prasong Sukkorn said he posted the ad “with the intention to be sexy, not lewd or tarnishing to the society.” The 50-year-old owner of Coffee On Day near the Kasempol intersection in Tambon Plu Ta Luang, said the idea stemmed from an offer from a model to help promote the coffee shop in exchange for free coffee.

But, said Thanachai, “even though the owner said he had no ill intention and had already removed the clip and photos, the offence had already been committed.”

Source - TheNation

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

#Facebook bullshit restrictions


And so on every hour


HOURLY a new updates from a restriction on #Facebook 

What is going on with this bullshit 

NOT any explanation what was wrong. 

The out of their mind, of is this an error ?



Tuesday, December 12, 2017

#Facebook and the mark of the beast

Is Facebook going down ?

Every day you see people leaving Facebook and looking for an alternative other social media.

The Restrictions, Blocking, Banning, Filters pushing people in a corner.

When you have and use a Facebook-Page, the make you madd, with dozens of pop-ups and messages to pay for Views.

When you go share these page postings  to groups, the are message you - ''You are spamming'' and delete these posts. And restricted you for a week or more.

It is on the moment all about Money on Facebook.

The total out of their mind.

We become daily many questions from people the searching for an other alternative.

We advise to go bypass Facebook and go use other social media and sharing programs like Friend+Me.

Alternative Social Media - Follow us




Thursday, October 19, 2017

#BANGKOK - NOT SO TASTY COFFEE AT MCDONALD


Thai man finds what believed to be cockroach legs in McDonald’s coffee.

 In what was a horrifying moment for all of us who take guilty pleasure in a Happy Meal, a Thai man has found what he insists are the spiny, long legs of a cockroach stuck inside his cup of McDonald’s coffee.

In a post that has already generated more than 2,800 comments, Facebook user Nastalgic Eik shared his story on the page of McDonald’s Thailand, after he found the mysterious “legs” in his coffee at the Lotus Rama IV branch in Bangkok this week.


“Yesterday, I went to eat at the Lotus Rama IV branch. I bought a coffee and I felt terrible about what I found. I thought the cockroach legs were from the cups, so I went to the employees and asked for a new coffee,” he wrote on Tuesday. 

“But when the employees poured another cup, it seemed that they found more cockroach legs in the coffee. I felt even more terrible. I expected McDonald’s to have high operation standards and clean your equipment… but nothing! At least when they prepared a coffee for customers, they should have seen the contamination inside.”

FOR THE BEST GLOBAL HOTEL & FLIGHT BOOKINGS

Eik later said that a representative from McDonald’s has called him, and they’re investigating.
McDonald’s Thailand this morning confirmed to Coconuts Bangkok that that was the case.
“We have sent a team to inspect the aforementioned branch and brought in the coffee machine for further investigation. We have also ordered the staff to clean all kitchen tools and all areas in the store,” a company statement reads.

“We apologize for the incident at that branch, and we have ensured thatall employees will follow the company’s food safety standards.”

This is not the first time a Bangkokian has alleged to have found a cockroach in their McDonald’s meal. In 2014, a woman claimed to have found a cockroach in her soft-serve sundae. 

The company, however, denied the allegation, saying their store was not the source of the cockroach.

Source - Coconuts.co
.
.

Monday, September 11, 2017

Zuckerberg to testify in court hearing


Mark Zuckerberg is heading back to court.

Facebook’s chief executive officer is expected to testify later this month in a shareholder lawsuit over voting power, according to a person familiar with the plans. 

The trial, set to start Sept. 26, will explore whether the board had shareholder interests in mind when it approved a new class of non-voting shares. The move lets Zuckerberg keep voting control of Facebook even if he sells shares.

He asked for the change so he could give away most of his wealth to charities. But shareholders alleged conflict of interest in a complaint that disclosed an embarrassing episode: Director and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen worked with Zuckerberg behind the scenes to pass the change, even though he was on a committee that was supposed to look out for shareholders.


“Facebook is confident that the special committee engaged in a thorough and fair process to negotiate a proposal in the best interests of Facebook and its shareholders,” the company said in a statement on Friday.

This will be Zuckerberg’s second court appearance this year. He testified in a case about whether the company’s Oculus virtual reality headset maker used stolen computer code.
Zuckerberg said the claims were false, but Facebook lost, with a jury awarding $500 million to plaintiff ZeniMax Media.

Source - TheJakartaPost

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Windows 10 update set for October release


Microsoft on Friday announced that a major update to its Windows operating system will be released globally on October 17.

Release of Windows 10 "Fall Creators Update" will come the same day that Windows Mixed Reality headsets powered by the software hits the market, Microsoft executive vice president of operating systems Terry Myerson said in a blog post.

Unlike virtual reality gear already available, Windows headsets made by partners such as Acer, Asus, HP and Lenovo will not require cameras to track user movements, according to Myerson.
Windows headsets will be priced as low as $299, and will need to be plugged into computers powered by the Fall Creators Update, Microsoft said.

The US technology titan showed off the Windows 10 update at the company's annual developers' conference early this year to encourage creation of offerings tuned to the software.
At the time, Myerson said the update will offer, among other upgrades, "enhancements in gaming, security, accessibility, and immersive new experiences made possible by Windows Mixed Reality."
 
The original version of Windows 10 debuted a little more than two years ago.

The latest version of Windows 10 is being built into a wide array of devices that will be on the market in time for the year-end holiday shopping season, according to Microsoft.


The company promised an audience of more than a billion people for those who develop services or applications for Windows 10.

Microsoft has highlighted how Windows 10 will let software savants serve up creations on the full spectrum of smart devices, including the HoloLens augmented reality headgear.

"By combining our physical and digital worlds, we believe mixed reality is the next step in the evolution of human computing," Myerson said in the blog post.

Microsoft was left behind in the smartphone market, which is dominated by Apple and Android-powered handsets.

Designing Windows to make Microsoft cloud services available from competitors' devices and moving quickly in the nascent mixed-reality market were seen as shrewd moves by the company.

Windows 10 is designed to power all kinds of devices, from wearable computers to smartphones to desktop machines, and an application needs to be written just once to perform on all of them, according to Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella.

Nadella said at the conference that "the mobility of the experience is what matters, not the mobility of the device."

To get Windows 10 adopted quickly, Microsoft plans to give it away as a free upgrade for a year after its release.
 
Source - TheJakartaPost

PS. #Facebook not fuck me again to block my postings and pointed as spam.

Friday, August 11, 2017

Siteground suspened you for not posting

SUSPENDED FOR NOT POSTING AT #SITEGROUND HOSTING 


After many warnings on Email and SMS, we are again offline for NOT posting.

You are happy with Siteground Hosting

How is it possible to be over the data limit when you NOT posting.

There is possible a leak in their system.

#TWEET
YOU HAPPY WITH #SITEGROUND HOSTING ?
@Siteground this is the 3th time in a week - SUSPENDED FOR NOT POSTING - A LEAK IN YOUR SYSTEM
 *
Siteground email

Dear Gerrit Tienkamp,
We would like to inform you that your account siam-shopping.com exceeded the monthly allowed number of CPU seconds per account and your web service is limited for the calendar month. The limit will be removed automatically at 00:10 a.m. CDT on the first day of the next calendar month and service will be fully restored.
For your convenience, we have updated the report on the CPU seconds per month in your User area, from where you can navigate to optimize your resource usage:
https://ua.siteground.com/usagereports.htm
If your website is going to need more CPU on a regular basis, please consider upgrading to a higher hosting plan. 

Best regards,
The SiteGround Team

PS. IT IS NOT ALLOWED TO BE ANGRY

https://plus.google.com/10019439453530701…/posts/G562PXsVaQu

Friday, August 4, 2017

Facebook to open office in Indonesia this month

.
Leading social network provider Facebook will open an office in Jakarta later this month as part of the requirements for its operation in Indonesia, said Communications and Information Ministry director general of information applications Samuel Abrijani Pangerapan in Jakarta on Wednesday.

Samuel was speaking after meeting with Facebook representatives, Alvin Tan, head of public policy for Southeast Asia and Jeff Wu, trust and safety director for Asia Pacific. 

Communications and Information Minister Rudiantara also attended the meeting.

“The office will be opened as a permanent business entity in South Jakarta,” said Samuel as reported by kontan.co.id, adding that the office opening was one of the three agreements made during the meeting.

 
Facebook will also establish specific business activities (KBLI) as required by the existing regulations for the type of business run by Facebook, Samuel said.

Facebook further expressed its commitment to deal with prohibited content on radicalism, terrorism and pornography, said the official.

Samuel added that Facebook would block all pornographic content for Indonesia users. “In other countries, they have several levels of pornographic content, but in Indonesia all pornographic content is prohibited,” he added. 
 
Source - TheJakartaPost
.

Saturday, May 27, 2017

#Facebook blocks 131 posts after Thai court order

THE DIGITAL Economy and Society (DE) Ministry has managed to have Facebook block 131 remaining posts deemed illegal under a sweeping court order since Tuesday.

The ministry planned to block access to more than 100 posts on social media outlets, including YouTube and Twitter, by the end of this week for posting content deemed illegal or improper, according to the DE Deputy Permanent Secretary Somsak Kaosuwan.

Early this month, the authorities issued an ultimatum to many social outlets to block access to hundreds of web pages and URLs featuring “dubious” content.

After Tuesday’s deadline passed, the ministry claimed that all 131 posts on Facebook alone had been blocked in the Kingdom.


 A Facebook spokesperson said the company would render the content unavailable in the specific country or territory and notify people who try to access it why it is restricted.

The government has blocked at least 6,900 web pages since 2015 deemed to carry illegal or improper content.

“We have had good cooperation from social media companies to close illegal URLs and we are still monitoring to delete illegal web pages,” said Somsak.

The Criminal Court advised the ministry in writing that it was authorised to block web addresses with illegal content without having to seek a court order for every one.

The ministry now plans to issue five announcements that will set guidelines of operation required under the Computer Crime Act which came into full effect on Wednesday.

New ministerial orders involve rules about the data screening committee, spam mail, and data storage. All these orders must be issued by July 23, two months after the Computer Crime Act became effective.

Source - TheNation

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Facebook awaits court orders

.

Prime minister says ‘no authority’ to suspend social media operations after deadline lapses

THE MINISTRY of Digital Economy and Society staff has said it expects social media giant Facebook to block access to all 131 web addresses deemed illegal by authorities by the end of the month.

Facebook, meanwhile, was waiting for official court orders regarding the content in question.
Somsak Kaosuwan, deputy permanent secretary of the ministry, said yesterday that his agency expected that the URLs with content deemed illegal would be blocked this month. 

He said the ministry had sent 24 official court orders in English to Facebook – each one focusing on a single web address – in order to support its request for the company to block the URLs, adding that blockage could be done within a single day. 

The remaining 107 official court orders will be sent as soon as they are available, he said.

 The ministry was waiting for official court orders from the Criminal Court.
Earlier, authorities gave Facebook until late yesterday morning to make the web pages inaccessible in Thailand while threatening legal action. However, none of the URLs were blocked after the deadline passed. 

The 131 web addresses in question were deemed to have content insulting to the monarchy, threatening national security, depicting pornography or being involved in fraud.
With more than 40 million users, Thailand is among the world’s most active countries on Facebook. 

Takorn Tantasith, secretary-general |of the National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC), said yesterday that his agency had through local Internet service providers (ISPs) sent copies of 34 court orders to block URLs with illegal content.
In response, Facebook requested an official English version of the court orders before it proceeded with blocking the addresses in Thailand.

“Facebook is cooperating with Thailand,” Takorn told reporters yesterday after the 10am deadline passed.

Morragot Kulatumyotin, president of the Thai Internet Service Provider Association (TISPA), said yesterday that in response to the ISPs’ request to block URLs, Facebook asked for official court orders to prove that the content was considered illegal under Thai law. She said Facebook noted this was in line with international standards.

Facebook yesterday again referred to its stated policy in response to the authorities’ request.
“When governments believe that something on the Internet violates their laws, they may contact companies like Facebook and ask us to restrict access to that content. When we receive such a request, we review it to determine if it puts us on notice of unlawful content. “If we determine that it does, then we make it unavailable in the relevant country or territory and notify people who try to access it why it is restricted,” a Facebook spokesperson said.

He was responding to a question from The Nation as to whether Facebook |would block access as requested by the NBTC.

Under its policy, Facebook will comply with a country’s request to remove content if it receives a valid court order, AFP reported yesterday.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha admitted yesterday that his government did not have the authority to suspend Facebook’s operations in Thailand following its refusal to immediately block the URLs.

Prayut said the only thing the government could do was to seek court orders addressing specific URLs and have social media providers cooperate by blocking those web addresses.

“All we can do is ask for cooperation from foreign countries, the private sector and Internet service providers,” the premier said. “It’s because we have no better options.”

He told reporters yesterday that 6,000 web pages had been blocked recently by foreign social media platforms and search engines following government requests.

“We are now trying to work on the remaining ones and we must continue to work by asking for cooperation from foreign governments, the private sector and local website administrators,” he said.

Source - TheNation
,

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Facebook refuses to remove graphic photos of dead Thai children

.

Facebook has refused to remove graphic images of dead Thai children, including a baby, because it says the posts do not violate its Community Standards.

The distressing images, were included in two separate posts shared in a Facebook group on May 11.
One of the images shows the naked body of a baby that had been dumped in a rubbish bin in central Pattaya.
The other images show the lifeless bodies of two children aged nine and ten who drowned after getting into difficulty while playing in water in Udon Thani.
Both images were posted in the “ข่าวจาก อาสากู้ภัย THAILAND” group which shares graphic and gruesome images from road traffic accidents and crime scenes throughout Thailand.
Both the images of the dead children have been reported to Facebook but the social media platform refused to remove them saying they do not violate its “Community Standards”, even though its standards say that graphic images should include a warning.
“We’ve looked over the post, and although it doesn’t go against any of our specific Community Standards, you did the right thing by letting us know about it”, Facebook said.
Instead of removing the images, Facebook instead advises users to block the person who posted them.
But if photos of dead children do not violate Facebook’s Community Standards, what does?
We’ve reached out to Facebook for comment.
Last month, Facebook was criticised for its failure to remove two videos posted to Facebook Live which showed a Thai man murdering his 11 month old daughter in Phuket.
The videos showed Wuttisan Wongtalay tying a rope to his daughter’s neck before dropping her from the roof of a deserted hotel in Phuket.
The videos remained on the father’s Facebook page for almost 24 hours before they were taken down.
One of the videos had been viewed more than 100,000 times, while the other was viewed over 258,000 times.
Despite a request from Thailand’s Ministry of Digital Economy, it took Facebook a further five hours to remove the videos even after government officials had intervened.
In response to another incident where a man murdered a senior citizen in Cleveland, Ohio, and then uploaded the footage to his Facebook page, CEO Mark Zuckerberg admitted the firm had “a lot more to do” on how it monitors and removes graphic content.
Following the incident in Phuket, Facebook announced it would be hiring 3,000 moderators to review content and help remove questionable content more quickly.
Source - TheNation
.