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| Privacy groups are incensed about Facebook's new privacy policy that allows users' images to be used in product endorsements without their knowledge. | 
A proposed Facebook policy that would allow your picture to be used in a product or store's ad on the site has privacy groups united in opposition.
 Executives from six public interest groups on Wednesday signed a  letter to the Federal Trade Commission, asking that the agency block the  practice. 
 "Facebook (FB) users who reasonably believed that their images and content would not  be used for commercial purposes without their consent will now find  their pictures showing up on the pages of their friends endorsing the  products of Facebook's advertisers," said the letter. "Remarkably, their  images could even be used by Facebook to endorse products that the user  does not like or even use." 
 Facebook reached a $20 million  settlement last week in a class action suit brought by those who argued  it did not have enough privacy protections. 
 Facebook said the  proposed policy was in response to that settlement. It said it would  listen to comments over a 7-day period that ends Thursday, and that it  would consider feedback before adopting the changes. 
 In  response to questions about the objections, Facebook said Thursday that  it has not changed its ad practices or policies, and that it is only  making things clearer for people who use the service. It said it wants  to make clear that you are granting Facebook permission for this use  when you use its services. 
 But Jeffrey Chester, executive director for the Center for Digital  Democracy and one of the signers of the letter, said the new policy  opens the door for even greater user of user's data. 
 "It  requires 'Alice in Wonderland' logic to see this as anything but a major  setback for the privacy rights of Facebook users," said the group's  letter. The group is particularly upset because it said it makes it  easier to use the images of minors who use the site. 
 Chester said Facebook unveiled the new rules on the eve of the Labor  Day holiday in hopes it could be put in place before the FTC and public  had a chance to object. But the comments from users at the bottom of the  page announcing the changes were overwhelmingly negative. 
  "Send me ads, fine. Use my photos or posts in ads, I'm out of here,"  wrote Margo Kelly, one of the Facebook users posting a comment. 
 Among the other groups whose executives signed the letter are the  Electronic Privacy Information Center, the U.S. Public Interest Research  Group and the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse.

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