It was a huge shock when I realized what Facebook was doing when they prompted me to update my privacy settings. Before, most of my profile was private. In the new privacy wizard, though, they had automatically selected for my posts (e.g. status updates, links) to be visible for everyone. Is this their plan for beings "more like Twitter"? Tricking people into making their posts visible to the world? I was about to just click "Next" without changing the settings (as I assumed they would keep them the same), but I'm glad I read closer.
The thing that annoyed me was that I knew it was coming, I knew they were trying to trick me into making all my stuff public, and their little wizard still turned on a bunch of my photo albums to public.
I had to spend five minutes combing through their privacy tools to fix all the things their privacy wizard got wrong. My preferences aren't that hard- keep everything private to everyone but friends of friends, period, full stop.
Yeah, I had to go through my mother's account and fix that. She keeps almost everything as private as it can be (Friends only for most things), but the wizard changed her settings to completely the opposite of what she wanted. I'm wondering how feasible it is for technically illiterate people to go through and fix their privacy settings or know what the wizard is doing to their settings.
Never trust 'wizard' characters who offer help on computers. They're a species of tricksters that either purposely mislead you, like microsoft's internet connection wizard, or, when they have more experience points, cast evil spells like this one on facebook.
My entire Facebook profile has been public for a while now. I've known for a while that this is the direction FB was going in, and I find it's much easier to answer the question "Am I okay with the whole world seeing this?" than weighing the probability that someone I didn't intend to see something will see something against the content of what I want to say.
Everything you put on the internet is public. If you're uncomfortable with some people seeing something you said or did, then don't put it online.
You're telling me, stuff I put on the internet back in 1998 is still public. My family had quite the laugh one time at a reunion when some of the old stuff came to light...
To your point, being transparent on Twitter and Facebook helped us secure the investor that we did. I think we would have had a harder time if it wasn't for these "tools". I use to view Facebook more privately when I was in college, but now there's Fb Connect + more interest in my career over sharing personal life tidbits.
There's a relative level of privacy that I never have to question when I keep personal stuff, personal...
My entire Facebook profile has been public for a while now.
Isn't part of the change that until yesterday no one's friend list was public in quite that way? (Yeah, I mean besides the "app gap" that continues to annoy the ACLU and the Electronic Frontier Foundation.) I was amazed at how much more I could find out about random people who are recommended to me as friends today than I could the day before yesterday. It seems to me that this opens up big space in the market for a Facebook competitor that can get privacy right.
To respond to one of the article's examples, maiden names and family relationships simply should not be used for security purposes.
Making this information public by default will be very beneficial for genealogical purposes. Why prevent this in favour of perpetuating broken security questions?
Agreed. The real issue is with sites posing a "security" question that is researchable. However, this is still a very common problem. I've taken to giving a password when somebody asks for my mother's maiden name.
I'm in favor of genealogical research, but by my estimation that isn't nearly as difficult these days and Facebook probably poses no obstacle nor discernible benefit. I was simply pointing out a possible vector of exploiting the information and that was the first one that came to mind.
It may be a bit difficult to understand, but most people in the world are constantly shouting: I exist, look over here, notice me! That's why all the kids dream of being famous.
Understand it: People don't want their thoughts or their photos or their words to be private. Some do, but most want to be in the center of things, have everyone read what they say, have people talk back to them, even if they are strangers.
It seems to me the people who want to be as private as possible are the people who are already famous.
I think you have a good point, but in this case Facebook seems to be doing this for their own marketing purposes, not to give customers anything they want, or even that Facebook thinks they want. I just finished trying to set all my privacy settings in Facebook to how I want them. I know exactly what I want. After many pages of pointing and clicking, at what should be on oen page, I still haven't found some of them.
Facebook should go in the opposite direction.
They should make their information public but forget about getting down to the individual level. They still have to figure out how to monetize what they have.
Do themes and summary levels to start with and market that, protecting the user's privacy.
This isn't obsession - I was shocked yesterday when Facebook prompted me to update my privacy settings, and I found that in several places they chose (by default) to loosen privacy in significant ways.
This is deliberate and sneaky - if someone just clicked through the dialog they'd automatically sign up to broadcast to the world what was before set as private communication.
The link you give doesn't say anything about settings in the new privacy wizard failing to take effect. I set everything to "old settings", and when I went to my privacy page it had indeed kept all the old settings.
I expect people experiencing this just forgot to click one of the radio buttons or something. It would be better if the wizard defaulted to "old settings" for everything, but it really isn't that hard to use.
My apologies, you are correct about that article. For some reason I thought that article provided better information.
I can however state that from my personal experience all of my information was set to "Only Friends" and after selecting "Old Settings" for everything, most of my privileges were reset to "My Networks and Friends" ... I don't have documentation of that, but that was my experience with the tool. I had to manually go back through each to make it map to my desired privacy settings.
Other posters have mentioned how this fails also - but more egregiously, when I went through the wizard several key options were by default not "old settings". Anyone breezing through the tool would have gotten caught.