This article was written on a user blog. The Partnerkin editorial team does not make changes to the text.
Writing and punctuation are preserved.
March 18 0 27

Preparing for the storm on Facebook.

Meta will allow users to choose what information they are willing to share.

Hey, everyone! Meta announced that it’s making changes across all its platforms to comply with the DMA law, which goes into effect in March 2024. Over the next couple of weeks, Facebook and Instagram users will be able to manually select what information they’re willing to share with Meta’s services. Brace for impact, arbitrageurs!

In March 2024, the Digital Markets Act (DMA) comes into force, requiring users of Facebook and Instagram in the EU, EEA, and Switzerland to fully understand how the company uses their data.

After losing a series of scandalous lawsuits, Meta had to bend to the rules of European regulators, and now the company: “Is investing significant resources to offer users more opportunities to use Meta’s services and features.”

In the coming weeks, Meta will send notifications to users, informing them of their choice regarding whether they want to exchange information between Meta services.

Such changes won’t go unnoticed in arbitrage and farming. Creating new accounts and centralizing them in the Meta hub, cutting ad reach, skewed statistics metrics, and other intricacies of working with FB await us until around March. While we weather these fierce storms, we can navigate through the anti-detection browser MoreLogin to operate on multiple accounts simultaneously.

We recommend not giving up if your campaigns are affected, test approaches with smaller budgets, and for personal development, explore other sources concurrently.

How do you like the article?

Best Google ADS accounts