If you were unfortunate enough to e-file your US #tax using HR Block, Taxact or Taxslayer, your most sensitive financial information was nonconsenually shared with Facebook, where it was added to the involuntary dossier the company maintains billions of people, including people who don't have Facebook accounts.

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A blockbuster investigation from *The Markup* and *The Verge* reveals that major tax-prep services illegally embedded the Facebook tracking pixel in their sites, configured so that it transmitted as much data as possible to the surveillance giant.

https://www.theverge.com/2022/11/22/23471842/facebook-hr-block-taxact-taxslayer-info-sharing

In their defense, the companies say that they didn't know that they were sending all this data to Facebook, and that they were using Facebook's #surveillance pixel to "deliver a more personalized customer experience."

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Facebook has been receiving users’ financial info from tax preparers

The Markup found that tax preparation services including TaxAct, TaxSlayer, and H&R Block have sent users’ personal financial information to Facebook through the Meta Pixel.

The Verge

The companies had set the Facebook tracking pixel to use "automatic advanced matching," which scours any page it's embedded in for personally identifying information to harvest and transmit to Facebook.

https://www.facebook.com/business/help/611774685654668?id=1205376682832142

Facebook claims that it doesn't want this data and won't use it, though the company has been previously caught violating fair finance laws by using finance data to discriminate against Black families:

https://www.cnbc.com/2022/06/21/doj-settles-with-facebook-over-allegedly-discriminatory-housing-ads.html

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But it's possible that Facebook isn't using this data - or that it doesn't know whether it's using this data. Facebook's own internal audits show that the company doesn't know what data it collects or how it uses it:

https://www.vice.com/en/article/akvmke/facebook-doesnt-know-what-it-does-with-your-data-or-where-it-goes

Remember, Facebook claims that it collects your data based on your consent; somehow it thinks that you can consent to collecting and using your data in ways that even Facebook can't describe.

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Facebook Doesn’t Know What It Does With Your Data, Or Where It Goes: Leaked Document

“We do not have an adequate level of control and explainability over how our systems use data,” Facebook engineers say in leaked document.

As infuriating as Facebook's role in this data theft is, the real scandal is that Americans have to pay for tax preparation *at all*. In most of the world's wealthy countries, the tax authorities send taxpayers a precompleted tax-return every year. You can modify this return (on your own or with the help of a tax-prep professional), or you can just mail it back. For free.

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This makes sense. The tax authorities already know how much you've made. They know what deductions you're entitled to. It is surreal that you have to pay a professional to fill in a form to tell the #IRS a bunch of things it already know about you.

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Every attempt to bring free tax prep to America has been scuttled by an unholy alliance of anti-tax extremists like #GroverNordquist (a sadist who wants to make paying your tax as cumbersome and painful as possible) and the multi-billion-dollar, highly concentrated tax-prep industry.

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Companies like HR Block and Intuit have spent millions lobbying against free tax prep. It's money well spent, because tax prep makes billions for these companies. The biggest tax prep companies formed something called "the #FreeFileAlliance" that purported to offer free tax-prep to low- and medium-income Americans.

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In practice, "free filing" turned out to be a marketing funnel that tricked people into paying for services they were entitled to get for free. Intuit alone stole billions this way:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/24/uber-for-arbitration/#nibbled-to-death-by-ducks

The #monopolists who run America's tax-prep services claim that "government can't do anything well" and insist that the private sector will bring "efficiencies" to tax-prep.

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Pluralistic: 24 Feb 2022 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

In reality, these companies literally have no idea what they're doing - they don't know what data they're collecting, nor who they're sharing it with.

Same goes for Facebook. Companies that are not disciplined by competition or regulation don't have to be good at their jobs. These companies' major competence is lobbying Congress to prevent the passage of meaningful privacy laws and laws that would save Americans billions through IRS-prepared tax-returns.

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As Harvard tax-law prof Mandi Matlock told Simon Fondrie-Teitler, Angie Waller, and Colin Lecher, this #DataValdez is the "almost inevitable consequence of relying on for-profit companies to handle a government requirement. It’s a process that provides users little choice but to hand over their data to Facebook if they want to comply with the law."

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@pluralistic Jeez bie, click the little globe on your threaded replies to get that "Unlisted" icon. Blowing me up here!
@cjbooker In most of my threads all toots after the first are already unlisted; you have misunderstood how "unlisting" works (unlisted toots are hidden only for nonfollowers on the same instance, not followers). As noted in my bio, I post long threads from this account and there are many ways to get my essays if you don't like my Mastodon style - RSS, newsletter, Medium, Tumblr, a blog, etc. I recommend unfollowing me here and subscribing to one of those if you prefer. Links at pluralistic.net.
@pluralistic @cjbooker is there anything I can do do at my end (web/tusky) such that only the first post in a thread will display? Otherwise I see all all posts from a thread in reverse chronological order as a block in my timeline.

@denyerec @pluralistic @cjbooker

Definitely a Mastodon misfeature... this needs to change.

@tasket @denyerec @pluralistic @cjbooker On the web, I clicked the first post of the thread and the rest appeared in order in the resulting column. That doesn't solve the reverse-order thread in the timeline, but it makes reading it make sense.

@skry @tasket @pluralistic @cjbooker Indeed there's no issue once you tap any of the thread entries - just the timeline appearance.

Perhaps there's a Mastodon specific way of doing it, or perhaps they're just not that far down their to do list :)

@denyerec @skry @tasket @pluralistic @cjbooker The Mastodon way to do it is to make only the first post public and the remaining posts unlisted. It’s generally considered good practice to make your replies unlisted as well unless your intent is to bring a post to your followers’ attention. Some apps provide functionality for the latter, but I don’t know of any that do the former yet. You can also just make all posts unlisted by default so you can select which ones show up in follower timelines.

@denyerec @skry @pluralistic @cjbooker

There's an issue because anyone who follows a person who makes lengthy threads will have their own TL inundated – it's all or nothing.