Lots of websites let you login with FB credentials, like the NYT
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You should be able to get a list of ones you linked via FB & then try to go change them.
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Replying to @RichFelker @__apf__ and
NYT lets you set a password and then delink it from Facebook, Google, etc.https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us/articles/115014887628-Social-login …
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Replying to @CopperheadOS @RichFelker and
Many other apps / sites don't bother with that kind of migration option, or don't bother implementing any alternative to Facebook login... Many apps / sites are now forcing using Facebook because it's a way to outsource anti-spam, anti-bot and other abuse handling... :\
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Replying to @CopperheadOS @RichFelker and
Good strategy for apps to allow social login to free load anti-spam due diligence then allow migration to email/pass once sign up hurdle is crossed. Might implement this.
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Replying to @Grantimus9 @CopperheadOS and
Please don't. Even momentarily enabling Platform permanently compromises your data.
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Replying to @RichFelker @CopperheadOS and
my app's data? I'm saying as an app-maker concerned about bots/trolls/spam signups, the mere existence of a fb account is a strong signal of real-personhood even if I don't share any data with fb or require more than an email address to login with fb.
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Replying to @Grantimus9 @CopperheadOS and
No, the user's. You're asking them to trust that you don't harvest massive amounts of their private data from FB (possible as soon as they turn on Platform).
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Replying to @RichFelker @CopperheadOS and
Not asking to blind trust - a company's privacy policy is a public representation of what they do, enforceable by FTC and state laws, so it's a promise that's enforceable rather than blind trust. Companies that seek to succeed need to maintain this trust/responsibility.
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Replying to @Grantimus9 @CopperheadOS and
This kind of nonsensical thinking is what created the whole FB/CA issue to begin with. Privacy policies are worthless unless they have teeth in the form of financial liability if violated.
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"We guarantee that we do not access any data from your FB account and hereby offer to pay $1M to you if this guarantee is violated." is a privacy policy that's meaningful. Otherwise it's junk.
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