Skip to main content

Can’t quit Facebook? You can protect yourself without deleting your account

Facebook started out as a great way to connect the world, find old friends, and upgrade this whole “face-to-face” talking thing we’ve been stuck with. It ended up as a way for marketers to Hoover up our information and sell stuff to us. The recent fiasco with Cambridge Analytica is a perfect example of everything that’s wrong with the social network.

But maybe, just maybe, there’s still some good left in Facebook. Maybe you don’t want to leave — how else would you stay in touch with Cousin Margo and that friend who moved to Australia? There are a variety of ways you can protect your private data, ensure your confidentiality, and in general prevent all those bad actors from latching onto your data. Follow the steps below to protect yourself without deleting Facebook entirely — or just go whole hog and delete your Facebook account completely.

Alternative No. 1: Remove Facebook from apps

This first alternative removes Facebook from connected apps. You’re essentially turning the platform off so third-party apps don’t have access to your account and its information. Here’s how to block them:

Step 1: Click on the down arrow button next to the question mark icon on the navigation bar.

Step 2: Click Settings.

Step 3: On the resulting “General Account Settings” page, click the “Apps” category in the menu on the left.

Facebook
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: On the resulting page, locate “Apps, Websites and Plugins” listed under the apps and click the “Edit” button.

Step 5: On the pop-up, click the blue “Disable Platform” button.

Alternative No. 2: Block specific data used by other apps

With this method, you’re controlling the data friends and family take with them to other apps, such as your birthday, relationships, education, employment, and so on. Here’s how you can cut off their data supply:

Step 1: Click on the down arrow button next to the question mark icon on the navigation bar.

Step 2: Click Settings.

Step 3: On the resulting “General Account Settings” page, click the “Apps” category in the menu on the left.

Facebook
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: On the resulting page, locate “App Others Use” and click the “Edit” button.

Step 5: On the pop-up window, choose the data you allow other people to bring with them in their apps.

Step 6: Click the blue “Save” button.

Alternative No. 3: Turn off Facebook’s data collection on other websites

Finally, our third alternative pertains to your Facebook information used for advertisements. These include your use of websites and apps, and advertisements paired with your social actions. Here’s how to nuke this use of your data:

Step 1: Click on the down arrow button next to the question mark icon on the navigation bar.

Step 2: Click Settings.

Step 3: On the resulting “General Account Settings” page, click the “Ads” category in the menu on the left.

Facebook
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Step 4: On the resulting “Your ad preferences” page, scroll down to “Ad Settings.”

Step 5: Switch on or off “Ads based on your use of websites and apps.”

Step 6: Switch on or off “Ads on apps and websites off of the Facebook Companies.”

Step 7: Choose “Only my friends” or “No One” for “Ads with your social actions.”

Step 8: While you’re here, scroll up to “Your information” and switch off the available settings to your preference.

Still want to delete your Facebook account? Fine then. Let’s move on.

Kevin Parrish
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kevin started taking PCs apart in the 90s when Quake was on the way and his PC lacked the required components. Since then…
What’ll happen to your WhatsApp account if you don’t agree to new privacy policy
WhatsApp

WhatsApp recently announced it would be changing its privacy policy, in a move that has many users worried about how much of their data will be shared with WhatsApp's parent company, Facebook. Now, the service has revealed what will happen to the accounts of users who don't agree to the new policy by the May 15 deadline.

TechCrunch contacted WhatsApp for more details on what would happen to users' accounts if they didn't agree to the new privacy policy. It reports that WhatsApp will "slowly ask" its users to agree to the new privacy changes, warning that they need to do so to continue having full access to the app's features. Users who decline to accept the new policy will be able to continue using the app for a few weeks, but only in a limited way. “For a short time, these users will be able to receive calls and notifications, but will not be able to read or send messages from the app,” the company told TechCrunch.

Read more
Zuckerberg slammed over coronavirus hoaxes: ‘You can’t contain deadly content’
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg

Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) accused CEO Mark Zuckerberg of allowing coronavirus hoaxes and misinformation to spread on Facebook because it's "engaging" and "good for business" during an intense clash at Wednesday's House Judiciary Committee antitrust hearing on Big Tech.

"The more engagement there is, the more money you make," said Cicilline, who chairs the Judiciary Committee's antitrust subcommittee, on the topic of Facebook's incentive to leave up content that may be harmful -- like the rapid spread of coronavirus misinformation currently making waves across the social media platform.

Read more
Zuckerberg: Facebook wouldn’t have fact-checked Trump
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaking on a panel at the Paley Center for Media

As President Donald Trump lashes out at Twitter for fact-checking two of his tweets and prepares an executive order targeting social media companies, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has weighed in — on Trump's side.

In an interview with Fox News set to air Thursday, May 28, Zuckerberg said that his social media company has "a different policy than Twitter on this."
“I just believe strongly that Facebook shouldn’t be the arbiter of truth," Zuckerberg told The Five co-host Dana Perino. "I think in general private companies — especially these platform companies — shouldn’t be in the position of doing that.”
Trump and many Republicans have criticized Twitter over the fact-check messages on Trump's tweets about mail-in voting, which alerted users to "get the facts" after Trump made an unsubstantiated claim that mail-in voting would lead to rampant voter fraud. Trump accused Twitter of censoring him and other conservative voices and vowed to take action against social media companies.

Read more