Talib had just finished uploading the photographs of the recent snowfall
in Kashmir to his Facebook profile and got 7 likes in the first hour
itself for his album. Facebook remains the only cheap tool to not just
keep in touch with national and international friends but also share
pictures and videos with them. He has been a Facebook user for so long
and remains logged in almost all the time. So if the friends need to
contact him, they may have to give a second thought to a call, as a
message on Facebook does it easily. Considering that Facebook allows
closed or even secret groups, he always has a lot of options who to
share with and who not to share with. This done, Talib is madly in love
with Facebook.
Come next week while trying to log in from his mobile device he gets a message, ‘please log in on your computer on www.facebook.com
and help us verify your account’. These kinds of messages were
occasional, if not usual, for him as he had verified his account a good
half a dozen times previously. On several previous occasions, he got the
friends’ photo verification which he passed easily. In these
verification tests he had to identify his friends from the photographs
shown by Facebook. On another instance he had to add his mobile number
to his account for verification. This, to assure Facebook that it was
his real self operating his account and not a bogus one.
Eagerly waiting to see the latest comments on his new album, and new
friend requests (if any), he at once logged in from his laptop. As
expected, he got the ‘verification’ message but this time it looked
different, ‘if this account represents your real self, please help us
verify it….your account may have been compromised with’. Next step was
the ‘captcha’ verification which he, being human, passed easily. (By the
way ‘captchas’ are used to check whether we are human or machine!).
Passing the ‘captcha’ verification, he was now just one step away from
unlocking his account and ‘regaining control’ of all the family photos,
videos & important as well as private conversations he had done.
As it turned out to be, this time the account ‘verification’ wasn’t
going to be an easy ask. The reason being that verification included
entering a code which Facebook would send by SMS (maybe SMS ban in
Kashmir comes into play!). Another option to get the verification codes
was a voice call from Facebook which would deliver the codes. But to his
agony, Talib got a message from ‘The Facebook Team’, “Your mobile
carrier might not be supported by Facebook”. The third (and final)
option for verifying account is to send a verified ID proof like
Passport or any other govt. verified ID proof to get the unlock codes
for the account.
Talib was desperate to get his account back as it is the only thing
where the memories of the past three years of his life are stored (and
locked!) & was ready to send the required ID proof (Passport) copy
via e-mail. Just then a thought came across his mind. If Facebook
supported his mobile operator while sending SMS notifications how come
is possible that it is not supported now when unlock codes were to be
sent. Something is fishy, he thought. He now realised that all these
verifications were a deliberate attempt by Facebook to gather more and
more private information about its users. The friend photo
identification in the initial verifications was used by Facebook only to
verify the tags in those photos. More the tags verified, more
information Facebook gets about its users’ appearance and social circle.
The mobile phone number which was required to be added to the profile
to ‘verify’ the account was just another attempt to delve deep into the
privacy of the users.
Talib is now ever so desperate to unlock his account, but with a different purpose…to delete it forever!!!
(This write-up first appeared in Greater Kashmir)
(This write-up first appeared in Greater Kashmir)