Internet users tap Facebook Inc.'s "Like" and Twitter Inc.'s "Tweet"  buttons to share content with friends. But these tools also let their  makers collect data about the websites people are visiting. 
The widgets, which were created to make it easy to share content with   friends and to help websites attract visitors, are a potentially  powerful way to track Internet users. They could link users' browsing  habits to their social-networking profile, which often contains their  name. 
For example, Facebook or Twitter know when one of  their members  reads an article about filing for bankruptcy on MSNBC.com or goes to a  blog about depression called Fighting the Darkness, even if the user  doesn't click the "Like" or "Tweet" buttons on those sites. 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment