14 comments

  • Cthulhu_ 1 hour ago
    Didn't Facebook do this years and years ago?

    Yes, 2013: https://mashable.com/archive/facebook-ads-photo#ggcKnNfAUaqy

    > According to Facebook's Statement of Rights and Responsibilities:

    > You give us permission to use your name, profile picture, content, and information in connection with commercial, sponsored, or related content (such as a brand you like) served or enhanced by us. This means, for example, that you permit a business or other entity to pay us to display your name and/or profile picture with your content or information, without any compensation to you. If you have selected a specific audience for your content or information, we will respect your choice when we use it.

    So it's not new. If you don't want this, delete your facebook account: https://www.facebook.com/privacy/dialog/delete-your-informat...

    • smalltorch 25 minutes ago
      Those are incredible terms that no one read.
      • acdha 14 minutes ago
        I cancelled my Instagram account when they added those terms in the early 2010s. At the time it was mostly photographers reading them and closing accounts but it wasn’t exactly a secret.
      • DANmode 22 minutes ago
        Speak for yourself.

        “Few”, maybe.

        • cute_boi 10 minutes ago
          99% of people don't read terms and condition.
          • DANmode 7 minutes ago
            We’re saying the same thing.
        • smalltorch 20 minutes ago
          I mean, I read them, but just goes to show the majority of people skipped this important reading.

          If anyone actually read them it's typically a unlimited unrestricted pipe of data they can use for anything.

    • pavel_lishin 56 minutes ago
      > If you don't want this, delete your facebook account

      What? I thought I could just paste a paragraph of all-caps legalese to my profile, and it would solve this!

      • steve1977 27 minutes ago
        This made me laugh and cry at the same time...
  • RattlesnakeJake 49 minutes ago
    Many years ago (back when Facebook still had sidebar ads), my sister was presented with a dating ad for "Hot Christian Singles" accompanied by a photo of our brother.

    It was hilarious, but also mind-boggling. In what scenario would pulling in a friend's profile photo create a useful ad?

    • dewey 27 minutes ago
      > In what scenario would pulling in a friend's profile photo create a useful ad?

      Exactly in the scenario you just described. You still remember it and you are actively talking about it years after the fact.

      • RattlesnakeJake 5 minutes ago
        But it didn't bring clicks to the website nor goodwill toward the company.

        No one remembers who ran the ad. Even if we did, it would only be in a negative light due to a weird and off-putting advertising approach.

      • fumblebee 9 minutes ago
        wouldn't "useful ad" imply either 1) clicking through and buying the product or service, or else 2) building up a positive brand association to help increase sales later?

        remembering an advert correlates but is different to it being valuable.

  • penr0se 1 hour ago
    This shouldn't really be surprising. It's very similar to what they did ~1.5 year ago when they started to use users' photos to promote Meta AI

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42615538

  • srmatto 22 minutes ago
    Is Meta abusing its users a problem? Yes. Does the TOS allow for it? Yes. Can people decide to just create a shell account and not actually participate? Sure.

    One of the real insidious problems with Instagram and to some extent Facebook is that they provide a free, low friction way for business to communicate with current or potential customers. As a result many small businesses use Instagram as replacement for a public facing website and perhaps a blog or email newsletter. Many small business in my region depend on Instagram for this purpose, its nearly universal. It helps keep you stuck in Instagram so that you can see a business' hours, menu, or special events. I guess a shell account is the answer but you're still going to have to navigate the skinner box feed.

    • haliskerbas 18 minutes ago
      Every time I try to create a shell account, it gets banned with no reason given. Even if it's just to follow a few influencer accounts.
      • srmatto 13 minutes ago
        Well there you go, there is no reasonable way to be a non-participant while also staying up to date on businesses that choose to use the platform.
    • cute_boi 9 minutes ago
      You can't create shell account on fb/meta anymore. They will ask to turn on camera and rotate your head.
  • tantalor 1 hour ago
    Comment on that thread:

    > This seems entirely counter-productive and creepy.

    Apt description of Instagram in general.

  • ricardofranco 21 minutes ago
    Something similar happened to me a few years ago. my photo was used in an ad, making it look like I was selling stuff and promoting a page I’d never even clicked on... absolutely mind-blowing....
  • encomiast 19 minutes ago
    I feel like having an account on a Meta site is today’s equivalent of being a smoker.
    • nicce 14 minutes ago
      There isn't better analogy. I hope it spreads and we will see the same effect and social pressure as smokers faced.
  • jimt1234 5 minutes ago
    I don't know what's worse - this, or all the ads/commercials for Meta Glasses featuring Kylie Jenner, like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2yYQO8exxaU
  • invalidusernam3 23 minutes ago
    "I'm uncomfortable"

    Should have read the terms and conditions

  • fullshark 1 hour ago
    Ten years ago maybe this causes outrage, but I'm not sure anyone cares in 2026 including potential customers.
  • quadrature 1 hour ago
    Is there actual proof that they are doing this. Theres not much to go on in the tweet.
    • tantalor 1 hour ago
      Besides the proof in the screenshot? What more do you want?

      Do you think this user is faking it?

    • ryan42 55 minutes ago
      yes, it happened to me recently.

      The photo wasn't mine, but showed a profile photo of one of my facebook friends, and it had the glasses and said "On my way!"

    • edoceo 38 minutes ago
      And they have a history of doing this. And their privacy/ToS allows it.
  • Zhyl 1 hour ago
    The XKCD for this exact scenario is 14 years old.

    https://xkcd.com/1150/

    • fullshark 49 minutes ago
      Kind of a stretch, these days can't imagine anyone that views instagram as a place to store their cherished photos also.
    • doublerabbit 58 minutes ago
      Some reason that strip doesn't load for me.
      • nicce 9 minutes ago
        It is just saying that if you don't pay for something, you are the product. I think it still fits well here.
  • ThePowerOfFuet 1 hour ago
    • kuschkufan 1 hour ago
      i edited it to the same url before opening as i usually do for twitter urls so that i can see the full conversation without being logged into twitter.

      for some reason the url rewrote iteself to this: https://themenspiegel.click/c/de/52_merzchrupalla/?method=po...

      which is a german language scam site. i have no explanation how this happened, whether it is xcancel.com doing this or something loaded from twitter that caused xcancel to do this. never seen anythin like it before, would like to know more.

      btw any further reloads of the xcancel url to that tweet totally work as expected.

      • pavel_lishin 55 minutes ago
        Throwing an additional anecdote into the bucket, this did not happen for me. Any chance you have a dodgy extension installed?
      • jadamson 29 minutes ago
        Sure you didn't just make a typo and hit a squatted domain?
  • hsuduebc2 1 hour ago
    I mean, what would you expect from company with morality of tobacco and slot machines producer? This is the least evil they are doing.

    This thing resurface from time to time. It's the small text you never read. In this case, small part in ridiculously and intentionally big eula.