instead of wedding flowers, he sported some bud for a corsage. he proposed marriage and this idea a few months back. mark asked me and i had to think about it, and i support it. i think it s great. the ceremony was brief, about 20 minutes, because it s warm inside of a grow room, and how do you celebrate? he insists they will not be getting high. due to the fact that it s still a federal offense, as a parent it s not something that i wanted for my family, considering my upbringing. very unique. thanks so much for being with me today, we have so much more straight ahead in the newsroom with boris sanchez, right after this. their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
years and i would do so but to think that we could lose home, retire sxment life saving and our business to leave our children and grandchildren, it is unbelievable. shannon: we will play a bit of sound for the prosecutor in the case. sexual orientation is a protected class just like race and religion and if they choose to it sell wedding flowers they can t do it only for heterosexual couples and deny the service to gay couples. shannon: is he right. she said it was not about the sexual orientation but the ceremony. but the laws on the books, she violated it? there are a couple of points to think about here.
a way to reach customers. if we can get solved in the relationship, it builds a bigger bond with or brand which helps sales. reporter: what he considers pay dirt, getting customers to share with facebook friends that they like the store which he says helped double the number of fans around valentine s day and then there are targeted apps. hypothetically let s say a 31-year-old woman gets engaged. what might your company do with that information? if a 30-year-old woman gets engaged and she lets that be known publicly on facebook, we might start serving up her ads about wedding flowers. reporter: that kind of information posted can be profitable for both facebook and advertisers. but some privacy watch dog groups are raising a red flag. jeff is the director for the center for digital democracy. facebook operates sort of like a digital wizard of oz. you don t know as it s collecting all the day it take about you and your friends who exa
known publicly on facebook, we might start serving her up ads about wedding flowers. reporter: that kind of information posted can be profitable for facebook and advertisers. some privacy watchdog groups are raising a red flag. jeff chester is the director of the center for digital democracy. what makes facebook different and one of the reasons we are concerned about it in terms of protecting privacy is facebook is not only tracking what you do on your facebook page and your profile, but it s tracking and analyzing the communications between you and your friends and acquaintances. reporter: facebook says it s not tracking private messages but messages posted on your facebook wall are fair game. it says ads are based on what people add to their profiles and in a statement said advertising on facebook is better because it s social and based on interests you choose to share. we don t share and never sell personally identifiable information to advertisers. one long-term technology wr