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About a week ago I deleted Facebook. Thought about going back a few times (for about 5 seconds).
I was going to type more but I’ve wasted enough time on Facebook. LOL

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You are saying “it’s over”, but Fakebook says “It’s complicated”
What don’t they understand?
They could just offer to let you download everything about you and delete
Then if you change your mind you could load it back up!
On second thoughts with FB security that might offer just too big a vector for mischief!

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Why does this site have Facebook’s (and others’) widgets on it??? Time to practice what (I’m glad) you’re preaching: please eliminate those links.

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But we’re not preaching that you shouldn’t use social media or that you should never click on like/share/upvote widgets!
After all, social media sites, used sensibly, are a fast, fun and effective way of sharing and learning about issues in cybersecurity.
We have about a quarter of a million followers on Facebook, for example, and very many of them enjoy our content and thank us for the help and advice we share with them there.
Simply put, we aren’t saying you should turn your back entirely on social media, any more than we are saying you should stop driving a car or never again use anything made of plastic.
We do, however, report on cybersecurity news that’s relevant to social media, and advise you how to use social media platforms so as to enjoy the benefits without getting sunk by the risks.

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I suppose that many who tried to login back again after 2 weeks… Were people that wanted to check if their account was really deleted… Than to get in facebook again

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If FB would provide the stats for attempted log ins after a delete request vs actual requests to recover a deleted account it would show that the primary reason someone would try to log in after 14 days would be to see if the account has actually been deleted.

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For me it’s a simple decision ,based on common sense, we all know Facebook is a company whose business is marketing and advertising, not social media, this is the way in which it captures its revenue stream.
If Facebook’s business model offends your sensibilities or morals then by all means leave, however fully armed with the knowledge that our personal data is going to generate money for them then we simply need to be sensible and put thought into what information we submit, if giving your phone number to FaceBook so that friends can contact you or to enable multi factor authentication is a big risk then don’t do it, make sure anything you post whether it be messages, pictures, video’s or anything you like, comment on or interact with is not going to cause you harm should it be shared with other organisations or if it were to be leaked or stolen by hackers.
If every user were to be switched on then using FaceBook would not be such an issue. The world can be a bad place so you have to take precautions especially where children are involved and online platforms must assist us in weeding out trolls, criminals and bad actors in general but at the moment it is up to us to stay vigilant.
Yes I like the fact that this platform can keep me in touch with friends and family with whom we are unable to meet up with face to face regularly and share memories and such but working in the Cyber security field also teaches me to be careful and that having such a platform for free means that there is a trade off and that is what ever I do or whatever i submit is collated and sold off to others. I say again, as long this interaction is not going to harm me personally or professionally then i can live with the rest.

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Deleted my FB earlier this year (though I still have an Instagram account). It’s slightly harder to keep track of some events related to hobbies and local communities, but I don’t miss it. The CA scandal was probably what pushed my decision, but it was the nastiness of FB users that had me considering deletion for quite some time leading up to that.

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Hmm.
“We’ve seen people try to log in to accounts they’ve opted to delete after the 14-day period.”
And how does FB know that? Only because they’ve kept the login details past the 24 day period.

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I may be wrong here but IIRC Facebook (and other sites too) quite deliberately keep a record of deleted accounts so that they can stop discontinued account names being re-used immediately.
(Mobile phone companies do something similar with “dead” prepaid phone numbers – after N months of non-use they cancel your SIM but they keep the now-freed-up number on a list that stops it being re-issued for N×M months, which reduces the chance of abuse.)
If you could re-register someone’s old Facebook account immediately because Facebook didn’t watch out for post-deletion login attempts, you could wait for people to announce that they’d just dumped Facebook and instantly create imposter accounts that would still have a lot of residual credibility.
In other words, Facebook no longer knows anything about you, or even for sure that it’s you trying to login to the deleted account – but it’s a reasonable assumption IMO that at least some of these post-deletion login attempts are indicative of someone who’s trying to change their mind, only too late.
Sure, some will be routine hacking attempts; some will be people verifying their deleted account no longer works; and some will be login typos. But keeping a list of deleted account names in not, of itself, a creepy thing and can help to prevent post-deletion account misuse.

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