Researchers can look at your Facebook likes & determine your race, gender & sexual orientation.

Researchers from the University of Cambridge and Microsoft have been able to discern people's gender, sexuality, age, race, and political affiliation, based solely on their Facebook likes. With significantly less accuracy, they've also tried to predict certain personality traits -- e.g. intelligence, satisfaction with life, emotional stability, conscientiousness -- and though such traits were harden to predict, the researchers were able to come up with lists of "most predictive Likes" for each. It's possible to see how, with a much larger corpus, even certain subtleties of personality could be recognized deep within the idiosyncratic data of Facebook likes.
The authors, Michal Kosinski, David Stillwell, and Thore Graepel, say the results demonstrate "how accurate and potentially intrusive such a predictive analysis can be." By default, Facebook likes are public information, but you can change that with a few moments' effort.
The most easily predictable variables were ethnicity -- underscoring the segregation that runs through society, online and off -- and gender. "African Americans and Caucasian Americans were correctly classified in 95 percent of cases, and males and females were correctly classified in 93 percent of cases," the authors write.
Religion and political leanings were also pretty plain, with predictions accurate in 82 percent and 85 percent of all cases, respectively. Men's sexual orientations were predictable 88 percent of the time; women less so, at 75 percent, "which," the authors observe, "may suggest a wider behavioral divide (as observed from online behavior) between hetero- and homosexual males."
One fascinating detail emerged from the researchers' efforts to tell whether a person's parents had stayed together until he or she turned 21. Although their calculations had pretty low accuracy for that variable (60 percent), the authors were surprised it was detectable through Facebook likes even a little bit. What makes a kid with divorced parents different from one whose parents are together? In the case of Facebook likes, it's that, as the authors explain, "individuals with parents who separated have a higher probability of liking statements preoccupied with relationships, such as 'If I'm with you then I'm with you I don't want anybody else.' "
This is not the first time research has shown that Facebook behavior accurately represents a person's life. Earlier this year researchers at UC San Diego found that they could predict who a person's closest friends were based on their patterns of Facebook interaction. As social-media theorist Nathan Jurgenson said of that study at the time, "The notion that the Internet is, or ever really was, some other, cyber, space, is wrong headed." That is to say, of course researchers can make predictions about you based on what you do on Facebook; you live online, leave clues about your life there, and researchers can study them, much like they could study your offline actions and draw conclusions about you based on that data.
The case of this new study is quite the same. Is it so surprising that researchers can "predict" that a man who has Facebook-liked the No H8 Campaign, the Human Rights Campaign, Adam Lambert, and Ellen DeGeneres is gay? Or that someone who Facebook-likes The Bible, Jesus Christ, and Christian music is a Christian? Or, say, that those who like Joe Biden and health-care reform are Democrats?
Okay those are extreme examples, and clearly the algorithm was able to make predictions with information far less obvious than that, but Jurgenson's point still holds: Just as we humans can make judgments about another person's intelligence, sexuality, or political leanings based on a scattershot set of clues -- entertainment preferences we know them to have or opinions we know them to hold -- a computer can do much the same. Its inputs may come by way of Facebook likes, but its process is familiar.
http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2013/03/armed-with-facebook-likes-alone-researchers-can-tell-your-race-gender-and-sexual-orientation/273963/
Facebook Graph Search to add posts, comments to search:
Facebook posted a deep dive of the tech behind its Graph Search ranking system today and buried at the bottom was a promise of new features: posts and comments search.
Sriram Sankar, an engineering manager on Facebook's search infrastructure team, wrote in the post that Facebook next steps include a better search on mobile and new content.
"We are also extending our search capabilities to do better text processing and ranking and have better mobile and internationalization support. Finally, we are also working on building a completely new vertical to handle searching posts and comments," he wrote.
Sankar explained that Facebook builds the search on top of different verticals -- categories that house a different Facebook element. This includes users, pages, and photos, which are categories Facebook members can already search through in Graph Search.
To figure out what categories to add, Facebook engineers are paying attention to what users like to look up most and what kind of answers they are looking for.
"While we have achieved a lot with the launch of Graph Search -- by growing our index to hundreds of billions of nodes and trillions of edges -- we have in many ways only scratched the surface in building a comprehensive search engine over the Facebook Graph," he wrote.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-57574368-93/facebook-graph-search-to-add-posts-comments-to-search/?goback=.gmp_125820.gde_125820_member_223277394