Destinations Magazine

Booking.com Hands Over Your Privacy to Facebook

By Pabster @pabloacalvino

Today, all my alarms about internet privacy (or rather lack thereof) rang out loud.

I was checking my Facebook wall when I came across one of those ads we’re getting of late: it was Booking.com (a website for booking accomodation) advertising hotel rooms available in Nazaré, a tiny little village in Portugal. Nothing to worry about if it weren’t because last night I had been searching for hotels in Nazaré using Booking.com, but: I searched without logging in, my Booking.com user and email are totally different from those in Facebook, none of those emails are linked in any way, as both are from independent mail providers.

Obviously this is not a coincidence: there is one chance in a million for getting an ad of the same forlorn place I had been checking last night. To my knowledge, there’s only one way this can happen: Booking.com and Facebook.com are interchanging cookies, crossing databases: i.e., they’re telling each other about our private information, so that they can sell us something.

I know we’re in the era of zero privacy, yet this is the most shameless and blatant case of handing over private information without consentment that I’ve ever come across. So, beware out there, internauts.


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