Posts Tagged ‘what facebook says about you’

Facebook founder feels the heat as privacy backlash rages

Friday, May 14th, 2010

The Sydney Morning Herald today reported that:

“A leaked instant messenger (IM) transcript from 2003 in which Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg mocks users who joined his then fledgling social networking site is adding to the sense of outrage over the social networking site’s cavalier attitude towards privacy.

The transcript, published by the sober Business Insider website, dates from the days when Zuckerberg was a 19-year-old operating what was then called The Facebook from his Harvard dorm room.

The IM conversation went like this, Business Insider says:
“Delete Facebook account” comes up as the first option now if you being typing the phrase into Google. But look what’s second!

“Delete Facebook account” comes up as the first option now if you being typing the phrase into Google. But look what’s second!

Zuck: Yeah so if you ever need info about anyone at Harvard

Zuck: Just ask.

Zuck: I have over 4,000 emails, pictures, addresses, SNS

[Redacted Friend's Name]: What? How’d you manage that one?

Zuck: People just submitted it.

Zuck: I don’t know why.

Zuck: They “trust me”

Zuck: Dumb f–ks.”

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Another way to kill off your online self

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

The Web 2.0 Suicide Machine is another free way of liberating your digital self. Unfortunately Facebook have recently blocked the service, I wonder why?

Though, keep checking the Suicide Machine website, as they are fighting hard for your right to delete YOUR personal information from venus fly traps like Facebook.

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Impress your friends, disconnect yourself. Join the world wide online identity suicidal network

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

About Seppukoo

“This is the end. My only friend, the end.”

You are more than your virtual identity
«Virtual life» is an – often – abused term used to describe the whole of one person online activities. But as media communications let our second/online/offline identities overflowing into real life – and vice-versa – the distinctions between the real and the virtual are becoming, more and more confused. Which is virtual? And where’s the real? Beyond all those questions only a fact remains: that our privacy, our profiles, our identities, our relationships, they are all – fake and/or real – entirely exploited for a sole purpose: to be sold as a product. But are those lives really worth to be experienced?

Pass away. Leave your ID behind.

With this great free tool, you can delete your online identity, naturally Facebook is fighting hard against such services, use it while you can.

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Facebook content will soon appear in Google search results, in real time

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

With so much money to be made, it appears likely that all Facebook content that is not specifically restricted by the user, will soon be shared with the world via Google and other search engines.


Reuters reported today that Facebook users will be greeted this week with a message presenting them with new options to customize privacy settings and directing them to a new, simplified overview page of all their personal privacy settings.

The changes will not, in any way, alter Facebook’s policies governing the kind of user information that is shared with advertisers, he said.

Earlier this year, Canada’s privacy commissioner said Facebook lacked certain safeguards to prevent unauthorized access of users’ personal information by third-party developers like game and quiz makers.

In October, Microsoft announced plans to incorporate Facebook messages flagged for the general public into its search engine results.

Google recently announced plans to incorporate certain Facebook data in its new real time search product, though the data will be limited to the special public profile Facebook pages created by celebrities and companies.

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Facebook, MySpace ‘reveal hidden messages’

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

IF you’re changing your Facebook status every five minutes there is a good chance the only thing people will notice is that you’re an attention-seeking extrovert.

Social networking analyst Laurel Papworth says there are hidden messages behind the overt displays of self-promotion on websites like Facebook or MySpace.

Status updates can show if someone is an extrovert or fishing for sympathy, she claims.

“The extrovert, they are always going to be updating because the world revolves around them and one can assume that means the world needs to know how they are feeling from minute to minute,” Ms Papworth said.

“There’s a lot of passive-aggressive behaviour in social networks and some interesting statuses — I’m mad at my boss, I’m mad at my mum, my teacher.

“We’re expecting our good friends to come and commiserate and give presents on our page or leave comments on our page presumably in support of our emotional state.”

Conor Woods, a 32-year-old executive and Facebook fan, said he sometimes catches himself thinking in short, descriptive phrases for his next status update.

He said his updates were mostly attempts at humour but knew others who were trying to carve out a better image online than they enjoy in reality.

“We live in a time where everybody is really conscious of branding and advertising and everyone is really media literate… (people) know how to shape their identity online to give the best image of themselves,” Mr Woods said.

Ms Papworth claims people who think in terms of visuals will update their photographs more often because that is what appeals to them.

But Mr Woods has his own ideas on this.

“I don’t like it when people use a photo that’s not them, using something like a rock star. It seems to me like they’re hiding away, like they don’t want to face who they are,” he said.

“The ones where you see couples, just in case you didn’t see in the relationship status that they’re in a relationship with that person, that’s the person they have their arms around. Now I get it, it’s too much.”

And if that relationship breaks down then a “no longer in a relationship” update lets your friends, and sometimes your ex, know right away.

“I know one girl who found out her boyfriend had broken up with her because he changed his Facebook status update,” Ms Papworth said.

“She rang him and said ‘You’ve changed the update, what’s happened?’ And he said ‘Can’t you guess?’

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