Earlier this month, Facebook announced it would be using facial recognition to let users know every time a photo of them had been uploaded to the site.
Such a feature would be extremely useful to one man - public-relations professional Jonathan Hirshon, who has managed to stay anonymous on the social network for the past 20 years.
He has more than 3,000 friends on Facebook and regularly updates his profile with personal information - where he is going on holiday, what he has cooked for dinner and the state of his health.
But what he has never shared on the social network, or anywhere else online, is a picture of himself.
It is, he said, his way of "screaming my privacy to the world". Full story...
Related posts:
Such a feature would be extremely useful to one man - public-relations professional Jonathan Hirshon, who has managed to stay anonymous on the social network for the past 20 years.
He has more than 3,000 friends on Facebook and regularly updates his profile with personal information - where he is going on holiday, what he has cooked for dinner and the state of his health.
But what he has never shared on the social network, or anywhere else online, is a picture of himself.
It is, he said, his way of "screaming my privacy to the world". Full story...
Related posts:
- Are you being watched?
- Moscow deploys facial recognition to spy on citizens in streets...
- Why nobody can trust Facebook...
- High tech surveillance with 5G wi-fi...
- Facebook wants to SPY on you through your webcam or phone...
- 'Faceless recognition system' can identify you even when you hide your face...
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