Facebook Masks Worse Privacy With New Interface
An anonymous reader writes "Facebook launched new privacy settings this week. Cosmetically, this means that the settings are explained more clearly and are marginally easier to manage. Unfortunately, some of the most significant changes actually make preserving privacy harder for its users: profile elements that could previously be restricted to 'Only Friends' are now designated as irrevocably publicly available: 'Publicly available information includes your name, profile picture, gender, current city, networks, friend list, and Pages.' Where you could previously preserve the privacy of this information and remain publicly searchable only by name, Facebook now forces you to either give up this information (including your current city!) to anyone with a Facebook account, or to restrict your search visibility — which of course limits the usefulness of the site far beyond how not publicly sharing your profile picture would. That Facebook made this change while simultaneously rolling out major changes to the privacy settings interface seems disingenuous."
I guess it depends on what you want to use this for. Me, I want more attention, so it's all good.
... now back to the bit mines.
I know it's a different company, but what did the CEO of Google say? 'If You Have Something You Don't Want Anyone To Know, Maybe You Shouldn't Be Doing It'. I see Facebook has the same attitude.
Wash me but don't make me wet. If you're concerned about your privacy, you should not be using social networking web sites. Any information you put into these services will leak one way or another, regardless of "privacy settings".
It seems to me that when you sign up for a social networking site like facebook any of the information you give them is going to be well.. socially networked.
If you don't want your name, address, phone, measurements, work history and other info made available for the whole world to see, DON'T POST IT.
It's odd that anyone wanting privacy would be using a social networking tool when that is precisely what the tool was not designed to do.
boycott slashdot February 10th - 17th check out: altSlashdot.org
If someone requests to add me to their friend list before, they could hide virtually all the information about themselves from me besides a name which may sound familiar. A curious person may add this person to their friends list because they don't know whether they know the person or not, thus divulging all their information to the party. At least now they'd have to make a profile that put them in a reasonable city and attract friends I know. I could check if they have thousands of friends world wide and probably don't actually know me before I give up my privacy to them.
The information which is forced public is adequate for identifying a person you might know without including more sensitive information like addresses, email addresses, and messages or photographs (besides the profile picture)
.
Facebook does not care about the privacy of its users. Get used to it.
It was an eye-opener for me when I realized that television networks are not in the business of putting out quality programming and paying for it with advertising, they're in the business of selling advertising and the programs are the means of attracting enough eyeballs to give that ad time value. "If they can come up with something cheaper than news magazines, comedies and dramas, they'll air it." And sure enough, there's now channels out there specializing in repackaging what are effectively Youtube videos into half hour shows complete with the requisite commercial breaks. You have your police chases, animal attacks, painful stunts, and cute animals. Whatever it takes to keep you fuckers watching until the next commercial break.
So, Facebook's mission isn't to provide a friendly place for friendly people to connect and gee, they just want to make enough money to keep the doors open and break even. I haven't made a thorough exploration of Facebook's business model but it's gotta be something related to selling PI or allowing marketing firms to conduct real world research. I know that stupid farm game gets people to spend real world money on virtual assets. I don't know how much of a rent Facebook charges them for operating on their app.
Kwisatz Haderach
Sell the spice to CHOAM
This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
Limits socializing, who knew? Seriously though, I have some friends from highschool that I wouldn't mind getting back in contact with and tried to look up on facebook. But with a common name like Mike Smith and no profile picture or friend information how are you supposed to find people? Maybe these people don't want to be found but that seems to be odd seeing as you have a Facebook profile. If you only want to have contact with people you are already in contact with something else would work, eg. email, Facebook IMHO is meant to help people find people they've lost contact with. This is impossible with too much privacy on the site.
While I realize that the best way to preserve your privacy online is to not sign up for sites like Facebook, the fact remains that Facebook appears to be intent on being free and loose with people's details despite constant pressure to allow people to control access to that information. Each time they "fix" their privacy issues, they just shift it to another aspect. They aren't really changing anything - they're just moving things around. Until they get a massive smackdown that makes them realize it's not profitable to keep up this shell game with their user's private information, they will continue just moving things around, making "this" thing private while making "that" thing available to the public.
But, like I said, if it's really a massive concern, just don't sign up for a Facebook account...
Yes, but you'd be canceling it now, after the data was exposed to begin with.
Likewise, when sites ask for security questions such as pet's name, there's no obligation to give a truthful answer: just one that you will consistently give to that site when asked that question. It's the internet - you're not even a number here.
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
Every day, facebook becomes worse and worse. The apps are pointless, and the site is slower and cumbersome (compared to its spritely version in 2004 when it came out). It is fun to be tagged in photos with your friends, and to post on each others' "walls", but that's about it. During college it was great to use, since everyone is growing up and want to meet new people. However, after college theres not as much use for it and I find myself barely using it.. its basically functioning as a "bridge" between when you just meet someone, to when you get their IM and you chat on IM instead.
The only thing keeping facebook going is that its achieved critical mass. I can see Google one day knocking out Facebook easily, since everyone now has gmail and eventually Facebook will need to move from "stupid, 3rd party, spyware apps" to real apps such as Calendars, maps, and such -- and google already has these features.
Zuckerberg should have sold for $750 million or whatever was offered.
But, it wasn't. Facebook notified that there would be "stronger privacy changes and improvements to better help control your information." Nothing was ever said about, "We're going to make some information available whether you like it or not." And, that's crap.
I understand your sentiment: social web services like Facebook are about sharing information, if that's not what you want to do, don't use them. On the other hand, less tech-savvy folks are not always so keenly aware of the implications of such privacy issues.
Slashdot is not a game, Slashdot is not a game. Crap, I just lost points.
You say that as though cancelling your account might somehow lead to your personal information being purged from Facebook's database and your photos removed from their web servers. Where did you get that idea from?
Indeed.
Your friends list can be hidden from strangers, it's just not in the privacy settings.
You have to go to your profile page, then click the pencil icon in the upper right corner of the friends box. Uncheck 'show my friends in my profile'.
It will still show your friends to your other friends, though.
"If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
so you can't hide your city anymore...carmen sandiego is FUCKED
Wrong answer, bright boy. DO NOT just delete an account, if you're concerned about privacy. The data remains on the server when you delete.
EDIT your account details FIRST. Change your name to Mickey Mouse, your address to something preposterous like 99999 Lost Highway, Bumfuck, Egypt. Change ALL your details, so that existing data is overwritten. Don't forget anything. Break contact with all your friends, unsubscribe to groups, replace your photo(s) with landscapes of the moon. Use your imagination. Really fuck up the account. Then, leave it ACTIVE long enough for several server backups to take place. Finally - delete the account.
Use your little peabrain for something besides playing pocket pool.......
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
No, you wouldn't have noticed a change, because the walk-through explains what portions of your profile are now irrevocably public that used to be subject to the "Only Friends" security setting.
Of course, given that your friends already have access to whatever you've set to "Only Friends", and every app they install has whatever access they have to your profile, the "Only Friends" setting is a tad misleading. "Only Friends, Farmville, Mafia Wars, Lost Sheep, Cute Fluffybunnies, and whatever crapplications your friends might happen to install" might not fit in the space available, though.
"This post contains words, known to the State of California to cause thought. Wash brain thoroughly after reading."
Not sure you looked it right. For me, at least my complete profile was available to the whole world, even though, previously, I had set it to make it as private as possible.
I was not worried about exposing some details to the world as I had posted very minimum to start with (effectively, only name and profile pic). But what pissed me off completely was that, during this change, they defaulted it to EVERYONE. If that's not a shitty way to apply 'more' privacy changes, I don't know what is.
I use facebook. When someone who isn't one of my friends looks at my profile, they see:
1) My name. Why else would they be looking at my profile?
2) My user photo. This isn't actually me, so I don't care. I didn't want my face up there, so I didn't put a picture of myself in.
3) My website -- actually just my flickr page, since I don't care if people find it. It's not like it has any more information about me.
4) My education and work listings. Again.. I left those up on the grounds that it would make it easier for people to find me, and I don't care if people see them.
So... where's the risk in those? No one can see my current address, because I don't see a need for it. If someone wants to know where I live, they can ask me. If someone wants to know my IM name, they can ask. It's not hard... they can still send me a message, even without declaring themselves my friend. Sure, if I'd filled out every piece of information and it was being shared, I'd be upset. But really... you don't have to fill any of it out that you don't want to, and anything you fill out on a site like FB should be considered to be public anyway.
There is a stupid loophole that still exists where one of your friends can use an app which can access just about any kind of information about you and give it to a 3rd party without you knowing about it. Even if you make a customized setting where certain friends don't get to know certain kinds of information about you, a Facebook app could bypass your own setting and get that information ignoring your "friends" privacy settings.
So remember to go to your privacy settings, then "Applications and Websites", then "What your friends can share about you" and uncheck whatever you don't want strangers to know about you.
Better suggestion: Use fakenamegenerator and come up with something that doesn’t look like an obviously bogus profile.
Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
Not quite.
I cancelled my facebook account around 2 months ago, and there was a two week delay before they actually deleted my profile.
Google had some stuff cached for a few weeks more.
Yes, precisely. Especially considering that FB needs to explicitly approve name changes. I went through the process once, and it was 3 days before they cleared it and my new name showed up.
Reply to That ||
Actually FB makes a clear distinction between disactivation of your account (they keep the data and just hide it from other users) and deletion (a feature they have been forced to introduce recently). You can always suspect they actually keep the data but no proof exists that they do so.
On the other hand, I guess a "quiet" account (someone who would not post a lot of info, and who would log every month only for example) must not be worth a lot for them. They live on the stats provided by the analysis of what you say and do.
Worse than that, the pop-up menu option for more privacy was not listed as "keep private", it was listed as "old settings". If you hovered over the "old setting" button a menu did pop up that said "private" or something like that, but clearly the menu was designed to entice users to reveal more private information.
A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
I think I was one of the last people on the planet to sign up for Facebook.
I figured, "I already keep in touch with everyone I want to keep in touch with". Oh, BTW, I've been out of college for 20 years.
But then I signed up. And you know what? There are lots of people I have lost track of over the years that I found on Facebook. It's fun to see their pictures, see how they have aged, and see their families. It's fun to read what amounts to peoples' diaries and see what is going on in their lives.
It's also a great way to post pictures of my family so that my friends and family can see them without me having to email them to whoever wants them.
Now I agree that all the apps suck. I have absolutely ZERO interest in what games people are playing, and I do not want to be notified that they just scored 10 points in "Sparkle" or whatever game it is they are playing. I have pretty much succeeded in blocking all the currently in-vogue apps, but I wish there was a setting that I could click to jut block ALL apps by default.
A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
The walk-through tries to change all your settings to everyone (less private). If you just click "OK", that's what you get.
It's amazing Facebook tried to pawn this off as an improvement in privacy; it is the opposite.
I don't mind sharing information, but I want to control what information is seen by whom. When I signed up and agreed to the original terms, they didn't share all of that info. So now my choice is let them change the original agreement, or not use the service anymore. I don't really like either choice, and think there should be more choices. Luckily I am not using my real name, and keep most real world details to a minimum anyways. But I still would like more options when it comes to sharing my information.
"But this one goes to 11!"
Your assumption is correct. It only recurses to one degress of seperation
It's not friends of friends of friends ;)
Wrong answer, bright boy. DO NOT just delete an account, if you're concerned about privacy. The data remains on the server when you delete.
EDIT your account details FIRST. Change your name to Mickey Mouse, your address to something preposterous like 99999 Lost Highway, Bumfuck, Egypt.
Thanks for releasing my details, jerk.
This is Facebook. A site which has had privacy problems more or less since its inception - mainly because the idea that sure, there might be things you want to share - just not with the whole world, okay? - was never (and indeed AFAICT is still not) part of the original design philosophy.
Anyone who has actually attempted to use Facebook's privacy settings for more than about 5 minutes should have already figured that out. Treat it (and indeed any similar site) like a dodgy pub with incredible acoustics full of big hairy neanderthals you don't like and gossips who can't keep their mouth shut and you won't go too far wrong.
Treat it like a private room in which you can share your innermost thoughts with your closest friends in complete safety and you are going to come unstuck sooner rather than later.
Huh? I was referring to fakenamegenerator.com.
Alexander Peter Kristopeit bought his basement from his mommy for one dollar.
Its a pain but you can b*tch at their customer support and get your profile expunged from their servers. It was a pain but I did it once in the past. Now I keep my profile limited to Name, City, Company, and networks. No personal details at all in my profile.
Bryan
If they have a decent transactional database, they'd be keeping a record of everything that happened. And I don't mean a database transaction log, but an actual row in some table that contains your previous data and when it was changed.
Information wants to be free. Isn't that a common meme around here? You can't take back what you've let out. If you want privacy, you have to be very selective about what you let out and to whom.
"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
This only makes the "privacy help" message they give you when you want to unsuscribe (I'm sorry that's "disable" which doesn't do shit) more hypocrite.
I'd like to see people disabling their accounts en mass claiming privacy concerns, not going to happen I know. Some times I hate the world.
Fuck facebook, and more than anything, fuck facebook users and their habit to post pictures of non users.
But... the future refused to change.
Until now that is, as you have to specifically opt-out of it now.
Or didn't you read exactly what they exposed?
@Mindless Drivel: 100% of Twitter posts ever Tweeted.