facepuppet blog

 

California Bill Would Force Change to Facebook Privacy Settings

May 17, 2011

A new bill proposed in California could force Facebook and other social networking sites to strip out personal information for children at a parent's request. 

SB 242 -- also known as the Social Networking Privacy Act -- would require Facebook and others to carefully police which pieces of information on individuals under age 18 are accessible to the public. It would also provide a means for concerned parents to demand that a site take down their children's information, or face stiff fines as high as $10,000. 

It's all wrapped behind the bill's main provision, which would establish privacy settings when a user first joins the network, rather than somewhere down the line.

"You shouldn't have to sign in and give up your personal information before you get to the part where you say, 'Please don't share my personal information,'" Sen. Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro), who introduced a revised version of the legislation on May 2, told the San Francisco Chronicle.

Corbett worries that the default settings on some sites make photos and biographical and family information available to everyone on the Internet after a user registers, unless the user changes those privacy settings.

But that seemingly innocuous requirement has some far-ranging ramifications. 

The bill "would force users to make decisions about privacy and visibility of all information well before they even used the service for the first time, and in such a manner that they are less likely to pay attention and process the information," said Tammy Cota, the executive director of the Internet Alliance trade association that includes Google, eHarmony, Match.com, Facebook and other companies, in a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

And Facebook itself, which has wrestled with the issue of privacy over the years, isn't exactly happy with the bill.

Spokesman Andrew Noyes told the Chronicle that "any legislative or regulatory proposal must honor users’ expectations in the contexts in which they use online services and promote the innovation that fuels the growth of the Internet economy. This legislation is a serious threat both to Facebook’s business in California and to meaningful California consumers’ choices about use of personal data

 

Facebook's stealth attack on Google exposes its own privacy problem

May 16, 2011

(WIRED) -- OK, here's the deal. A big corporate PR firm, Burson-Marsteller, tried to entice USA Today to lambaste a Google feature called Social Circle, on privacy grounds. It also encouraged a security blogger to write an op-ed attacking Google on the product.

Burson would not say the name of its client. But instead of taking the bait, USA Today did due diligence and consulted experts who said that Social Circle was small potatoes compared to more pressing privacy stories.

Instead it published...


Continue reading...
 

Facebook sued for $1 billion over Intifada page

April 2, 2011

Facebook and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg have been hit with a lawsuit seeking more than $1 billion in damages over a page on the social network which called for a "Third Intifada" against Israel.

Facebook this week shut down the "Third Intifada" page, which had almost 500,000 fans, but the lawsuit filed in a court here claims that the social network showed "negligence" by not quickly responding to appeals to remove the page.

Besides awarding damages, the complaint calls on the court to bar Fac...


Continue reading...
 

Facebook Is AOLifying The Internet – And That Sucks

March 9, 2011

When an entire generation of computer users first poked our doe-eyed faces onto a young internet, many of us were greeted with a single, encompassing, monolithic face peering back: the AOL Home Screen. To call it a young internet isn’t even fair – it was a mature, thriving AOL. It was ubiquitous, it was powerful, it was everything – and it ended up destroying itself, too flawed by design to last. And nobody’s learned a lesson.

How do we know nobody’s learned shit since the days of th...


Continue reading...
 

Sucked in by Facebook scammers

March 8, 2011

Click on a link and pollute your friends’ walls
 

 
 NEW YORK — Andy Hall is tall and slim, always has been, and his secret to staying slender does not come from a pill.

So when he woke up recently to see messages from far-away friends asking him about the possible benefits of a weight-loss supplement, Hall, 25, was momentarily confused.

Then he checked his Facebook wall.

It seems that the night before, Hall had inadvertently clicked a faulty link that sc...


Continue reading...
 

Facebook app lets you stalk -- er, monitor relationships

February 21, 2011

I really cannot believe the crap Facebook comes up with!

 
 (CNN)
 -- Stalk much?

Facebook Breakup Notifier, a new app for the site, is super simple -- and will probably be super popular.

It lets users pick certain friends whose relationship status they'd like to monitor. If one of those relationships changes, the user gets notified by e-mail.

"You like someone. They're in a relationship. Be the first to know when they're out of it," promises the app's website.

So, if that old high school flame sudd...


Continue reading...
 

Facebook halts phone number sharing feature

January 18, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Facebook is temporarily disabling a feature that gave app developers access to some of the most sensitive personal data it possesses: Members' addresses and phone numbers.

The company had slipped the feature in quietly, announcing it at the end of last week in a post on its developer blog. But late Monday, Facebook said it is suspending the feature until it can fine-tune how it works. "Over the weekend, we got some useful feedback that we could make people more clearly ...


Continue reading...
 

© 2016 facepuppet.com 

Recent Posts