
Today, on December 2, 2014, I went and actually read Facebook’s terms of service after seeing a zillion people post privacy notices which various debunking sites, including but not limited to Snopes, say are a scam and useless.
I realized that under these terms anyone who uses Facebook gives them a royalty-free transferable worldwide license to their uploaded original content. That sounds bad, except that without that clause, it would be illegal for FB to allow other people to share your posts, or even read them. This license also ends when you delete your Facebook account or delete any given post from Facebook.
That makes such a license a reasonable, necessary, and good thing, good because without it Facebook could not exist. In order to even view someone else’s status post, you are downloading a copy of something they created. They are sending a copy of what they wrote to Facebook, which stores a digital copy, and then when you log in they send the copy to you, which you download to your computer than open in order to see it. This is perhaps oversimplified, but in terms of copyright law that is what is happening.
Obviously, that’s not legal unless the people using Facebook agree to terms that allow this. Which they do.
Except I guess they don’t because they are posting stuff like this. But they keep using Facebook so their actions make their words meaningless.
Copying and pasting a legal notice originally written by someone else does not negate the terms of service you prove you agree to by continuing to use Facebook.
If you don’t trust Facebook to not use your content for advertising or sell it, that may or may not be a legitimate concern, but expecting a status post to change that while continuing to allow them to control your data is ridiculous.
The privacy notice is a talisman. People put on the necklace of copyright law and then go back to posting photos and updating their status and think they’re protected. It’s like garlic and vampires: both the effectiveness of the step and the reality of the threat are doubtful.
The real way around it is to not put content you care about on Facebook’s servers. Put it up on your own site, or using another service who you trust, and then link to the content on FB. Or stop using Facebook.
Or, you can just get over it. Sharing something you created requires a level of trust and a relinquishing of control. Books can be copied. Music can be stolen. Paintings can be photographed. This was true even before the internet existed.
But with the internet, you can share your work with more people, easier. If you have something you want to share with the world, this is a good thing. If you want to completely control your work, this is not, but there’s a solution: keep it to yourself and don’t let anyone else see it, ever.