BLOG.RONSOME.COM

Another Facebook Privacy Rant

May 15, 2010

First, a little perspective. Facebook is not a fundamental right. It isn't a necessity of life. It doesn't even offer a unique service. Given these facts, all of the noise about Facebook's privacy problems seems a little excessive. In particular, the contention that there is something wrong with Facebook's "all or nothing" approach to privacy is silly. Simply put, Facebook can't publish information about you that you don't provide. Don't want people to know where you live? Don't put it on Facebook. If you don't trust them with any of your info opt out.

I also wonder if there isn't enough distinction between personal information and personally identifiable information. For years, retail stores have taken surveys wherein they ask for the customer's phone number when completing a sale. The reason, they'd claim, was to get an idea of the store's geographical demographics. Well, that makes sense until you consider that using a ZIP code would work just as well for such purposes. Both numbers should be considered "personal information". The difference is that a ZIP code may be shared by thousands of people, while a telephone number belongs to a single household or individual. As far as I know, Facebook doesn't release personally identifiable information (such as email or phone number) to non-friends. As for other info, again, if you don't want it known, don't volunteer it.

Labels: ,

2 Comments:

  • The problem is the FB bait and switch. I signed up under a certain set of rules, which are no longer remotely close to the rules it operates under. Moreover, it's now almost impossible to dump your account--if you dislike the rules so much, you can't leave.

    Generally I try to act as though FB is as public as Twitter, however.

    By Blogger Kyrce, At Jun 12, 2010, 8:22:00 PM  

  • Facebook, like pretty much every company with a privacy policy reserves the right to change that policy at any time. Nothing wrong with that. Certainly you can leave - just delete your account. Can you be sure that they'll delete every last byte of data that you put in? Maybe not, but you can't be sure they won't delete every last byte of data either.

    You treat Facebook much the same as me. The old adage that applied to the Internet 15 years ago, still applies to this day: If you don't want everyone to know something, don't put it on the Internet.

    By Blogger Unknown, At Jun 15, 2010, 8:17:00 AM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]



<< Home