Comment Re:Interesting (Score 1) 203
Every web page that has a FB 'like" button or other FB gizmo is automatically recording that you visited that page in FB's data bank. That could solve some of the mysteries of why FB recommends certain friends who haven't even filled out their FB profiles -- you both probably visited the same unusual web pages, and have a few other things in common like location (FB could get it from your IP address if not from your profile). FB can do this whether or not you have a FB account and have agreed to FB's privacy policy.
Considering the FB javascript code is embedded into other web pages, I'm not sure that they cannot see the data you enter into all the forms as well. What a goldmine of information that would be!!!
You could clean out your FB cookies after every web site you visit, so you look like a new person to keep FB from correlating all the pages you visit and form data you fill out (assuming they don't correlate by your IP address alone). Better, you can get a plug-in that blocks anything from FB from loading into other web site's pages until you give it permission (e.g. Request Policy for FF)
Or you can just accept that FB knows just about everything you do on the web, since just about every significant web site promotes itself by having an associated FB page they want you to "like".
(As a webmaster, I've decided to take the lead from some German web sites, and disable the FB "like" button in my website until a person clicks on a button to enable it. And it's permanently disabled on any page where the user can enter personal information.)