Public Facebook profiles
Posted: Thu Feb 13, 2025 5:10 am
We know what you're doing!
People remain creatures that like to express themselves, also on social media. Feelings, such as frustration, but also joy, are often shared. These are often impulsive moments, when a user expresses his emotion via Twitter or Facebook. Not everyone realizes the impact of sharing certain information publicly. An 18-year-old boy has addressed this phenomenon with his site We Know what you're doing .
Thanks to this experiment, which has now collected almost 29,000 likes, all public updates malaysia telegram data of Facebook users, which have to do with 'disliking' a boss, taking narcotics 'who's taking drugs?' and new phone numbers, are listed. Facebookers who have a public profile and have recently posted a message with/about not being allowed by their boss or having a hangover are analyzed and placed on this site. You can see the time and from where they posted (via an iPhone, BB, web).
His idea for the concept comes from a video (see below), which very openly, based on actual data, shows what people do online in terms of checking in and leaving their personal information, such as their address, phone number, work details and information about their family. Also because many people have their Facebook profile set to 'public'. No opinions, just facts based on real public tweets, Facebook updates and 'check-ins'.
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The data used for 'We know what you are doing' comes from Facebook's Graph API. You can find it good or bad that Facebook facilitates its network for programmers. You can and may of course have an opinion about this. But it is always the users themselves, who are (ultimately) responsible for their accounts and in, I assume, most cases have placed the updates themselves. That is why the young programmer and inventor, Callum Haywood , neatly concludes with:
People remain creatures that like to express themselves, also on social media. Feelings, such as frustration, but also joy, are often shared. These are often impulsive moments, when a user expresses his emotion via Twitter or Facebook. Not everyone realizes the impact of sharing certain information publicly. An 18-year-old boy has addressed this phenomenon with his site We Know what you're doing .
Thanks to this experiment, which has now collected almost 29,000 likes, all public updates malaysia telegram data of Facebook users, which have to do with 'disliking' a boss, taking narcotics 'who's taking drugs?' and new phone numbers, are listed. Facebookers who have a public profile and have recently posted a message with/about not being allowed by their boss or having a hangover are analyzed and placed on this site. You can see the time and from where they posted (via an iPhone, BB, web).
His idea for the concept comes from a video (see below), which very openly, based on actual data, shows what people do online in terms of checking in and leaving their personal information, such as their address, phone number, work details and information about their family. Also because many people have their Facebook profile set to 'public'. No opinions, just facts based on real public tweets, Facebook updates and 'check-ins'.
Accept cookies
The data used for 'We know what you are doing' comes from Facebook's Graph API. You can find it good or bad that Facebook facilitates its network for programmers. You can and may of course have an opinion about this. But it is always the users themselves, who are (ultimately) responsible for their accounts and in, I assume, most cases have placed the updates themselves. That is why the young programmer and inventor, Callum Haywood , neatly concludes with: