The amount of data tech companies collect about us and our internet usage is not surprising anymore. Google knows an absurd amount about you and your habits, and so does Facebook. Thankfully, you can quickly see what Facebook thinks it knows about you via its ad preferences page — information the company uses to show you advertisements on the site. If you don't like what you see, you can use this page to adjust and remove your interests. Take a look ahead to see what the page looks like and how to fix it.
Here, you'll see an explanation of why Facebook collects this information, as well as all the interests the website thinks you have.
Click on the different sections to see what pages you've liked and what Facebook thinks you like too.
In the "Lifestyle and culture" section, Facebook gets personal. It tells you all these facts it thinks about you. For example, it thinks it knows I live away from my hometown, that my political views lean liberal, that I use Gmail and Google Chrome, and other tidbits.
Tap on the "More" section and you'll see seven more interest tabs.
To get rid of an interest, just hover your mouse over the interest. You'll see an immediate popup of why Facebook thinks you like this topic, examples of ads the company will show you based on this, and a "X" to remove the interest.
In the "Advertisers" section, you can see two groups: advertisers that have your contact information and those "whose ads you may see because you visited their website or app that uses Facebook technology." To remove them, hover your mouse over the icon and tap the "X" in the top right corner.