Facebook Privacy Loophole – You Have No Control Over This One
Every week there is a new article discussing Facebook's lack of respect for privacy. I personally have always known how to use the privacy settings to my benefit and how to truly control what was being seen and who was seeing it. That is... until now. The privacy settings are so complicated that even someone who has been on Facebook for 5 years (myself), cannot figure out what's what at times. I see a problem in that the average user would have even a harder time than I would.
My biggest gripe right now is the following:
I have 2 friends. Say one is Susie and the other is Jessica. Susie and Jessica have no idea who each other are and both of their profiles are private. Susie updates her status on an item that may be considered little inappropriately funny. I too, joke around on her page thinking the conversation is remaining on her page alone. Jessica signs onto Facebook and upon signing in, sees on her mini-feed Susie's entire status update, along with the thread of comments - including my own.
The question is: Why is this happening? How? And to what benefit does Facebook get from impeding on people's privacy this way?
Susie and Jessica do not know each other and as far as I knew, my conversation on her content was left on her page alone. When doing a video comment on a friend's wall one day, another friend of mine from overseas was able to comment on the video and the comment ended up on my other friend's page. This made her feel pretty uncomfortable considering comments from complete strangers on your wall is never a good sign in terms of privacy. I posted a question asking how many people have been able to see my comments on complete strangers' status updates and the amount of people who said they had seen it both baffled and angered me.
With that being said, if you are unaware of a certain setting or two, your updates, photos and more can be broadcasted for complete strangers to see. Additionally, even if you have already changed the setting on your end, you have to be concerned about whose pictures and updates you comment on. If the person posting the update/photo/video doesn't have their own settings changed, your comments will show up on your friends' mini-feeds as well. Something like this will likely prevent people from commenting on different items simply because they're not sure about whose mini-feed it'll show up in, thus defeating the interactive point of Facebook.
It is frustrating that the personalization options of our privacy has decreased week by week on Facebook. I used to prevent certain people (young family members in particular) from being able to see my status updates but wanted them to be able to see everything else. Now Facebook has made it so that if you do not want them seeing your status updates by default, they can never write on your wall in general or see anything you post. Grouping the settings together really gives you the Facebook user less control and ultimately, a less enjoyable experience.
(Here is an example of a photo I commented on of a friend's and how my brother was able to not only view the photo and its comment, but post a comment himself)

I present myself quite well on Facebook most of the time but of course when you think your comments are limited to your friends' profile and they haven't been, one can never feel good about that. Even with the newest privacy control provisions, the "Everyone" feature is selected by default for profiles when it comes to the visibility of your content and the posts you put on your page. For Facebook to do this, is shameful. It is more or less an "opt-out" experience as opposed to the "opt-in" experience Facebook once was. Now if only there was a true alternative to Facebook... many would probably flee happily. However, Mark Zuckerberg and the gang are aware that so many of us have made it a part of our every-day lives in terms of keeping in contact people from around the world, that we'd rather deal with the privacy issues than give it up altogether.
Now I know there are several rebuttals to all of this and I understand if you want things completely private you could just delete the site, email them personally and so on. However, when the site encourages engagement via status comments, video comments and thensome, you'd simply expect to be able to do exactly that without the world seeing every word you post. Each person has a different relationship and way of speaking to various people in their lives. You wouldn't talk the same way to your grandmother as you would your best friend but having to put a generic facade to appease each group of people in your life while personally interacting with everyone is just ridiculous. You shouldn't have to jump through hoops just to have a similar positive experience that you had on the site years ago.
To do a quick audit of your Facebook privacy settings, visit ReclaimPrivacy.org
Also to join a good Facebook page that discusses these issues, visit here.
To avoid having your status updates show up on strangers' mini-feeds, do the following: ACCOUNT -> PRIVACY SETTINGS, choose the Top setting and set POSTS BY ME to ONLY FRIENDS.
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Facebook’s Birthday Gift to Themselves: A New Layout?
Many of us know that today is Facebook's 6th birthday. (Happy Birthday!) Is there a new permanent layout? This time unannounced? Perhaps I haven't been paying attention to the newest Facebook news but I certainly wasn't aware there'd be a reasonably drastic change anytime soon. No wonder I couldn't login via Facebook Mobile all day long. Last night Facebook prompted me to download the new Facebook uploading plugin which eventually made my Facebook uploading process a much more enjoyable one actually. While I usually dislike their layout changes, I have to say I'm a bit open-minded about this one. It's crisp and easy to navigate from the few minutes I've spent on it. So far from what I see, it makes the user experience a bit easier and less cluttered. Anyone else seeing it? And if so, what are your thoughts?
Homepage:
Drop-Down Friend Requests (same goes for inbox messages as well):
Drop-Down Notifications:
Social Media & Time
While I actively promote social media as a means of social interaction, marketing and more, I also understand that you need one thing to be truly active in this space: time. As they say, time is money and keeping up with all the sites you've signed up for can be tedious and demanding. Not only do I have several sites to keep up with, but even this blog is hard for me to update as often as I'd like. Oftentimes I figure that since blog posts will be out there for the world to see, must like newspapers in print - we must make them worthy of being read, so bare with me here. I'm not sure this is "blog worthy" but it's something I'm noticing as of late. Despite my being in this industry, I'm having a hard time doing what I pretty much preach about to others. Hmm, not good.
There are hundreds of social sites out there and while I'm signed up for many, I will admit that the one issue I have is the time to spend keeping up with all of them. While I actively use Facebook on a daily basis, where do I find the time to stay in tune with Twitter, Friend Feed, Seesmic, LinkedIn, CafeMom, Brightkite, Plurk, Digg, StumbleUpon, Flickr, Ping.fm, and more? Each site has their own unique capabilities and can be extremely beneficial but it's mind boggling to be a part of so many of them! To have a profile that is barely active is (to me) worse than having no profile at all. Why be on a site if you cannot put some time into it? I hate to think that there is a number of profiles I've started up laying around abandoned on the web due to my lack of time but after seeing several topics on this subject, none have really led to a solution for me.
The average person is not in social media (as their career) but with the ever growing pressure to be on such networks for social and business purposes, which ones do they choose and how do they find the time between family and work to be active participants? With new ones popping up each day, do we ignore them and give them no love due to "oversaturation" of the social media market despite the possible innovative functionality they may possess? More importantly, for those IN the industry, where do they find the time around client work to keep up their online personalities while not sacrificing the time that should be spent doing other things?
I remember the days when Friendster existed... then Myspace... then Facebook. Now it's a social media frenzy and if you're just sitting on the sidelines and not participating, you're as good as dead it seems. What's a girl to do? It seems in order to be "in the know" and to be a part of "social media", you have to be on every big well-known site but is this true? Is it better to enjoy the little things in life off the web and spend less time online thus damaging your credibility as a "social media expert"? Or being online and "connected" every second of nearly every day while losing your credibility as a mom or a normal human being. When venturing out and seeing something interesting but not photo-worthy to most, I will often capture a picture and upload it to Brightkite. Those around me cannot understand why the iPhone has to be connected constantly and why moments have to be interrupted by taking out the few minutes to upload, write a caption and Tweet about a damn subject or what is going on. Sometimes I snap back into reality and realize that this social media bubble many of us are in and are pressured to be more a part of, is both exceedingly time-consuming and unrealistic. Social media = fantastic. Social media = the wave of the future. I understand this, respect this and love the industry but am not as concerned as others to be visible on every single site for the sake of looking bigger, better and more knowledgeable on the subject. However, in ways I cannot help but sometimes wonder how I can find the time to do more on these sites and keep up with as many (like others do).
Where do you find the time to be human or to do activities in the real world? If we're tweeting every moment of our lives, brightkiting a photo each second and then updating the status on every site, is this real life? What's more important? Online or offline?
Many say social media enhances offline activities - ie business networking/opportunities, like-minded meetups etc. While I believe it does and use it for those purposes myself, I can't help but find it a tad difficult to keep up with it all these days. Those who are constantly connected have to remember that time is precious and irreplaceable. I know I have to remind myself that social media is complementary but certainly should not replace the valuable time you should keep offline. You should too.
Social media & time, where do you draw the line and where do you find the time?
Is Social Media Making Today's Kids Vain?

*This has been going on for years I know... but I was reminded of it all while spending time with my niece*
It's an epidemic! Kids everywhere are falling victim to vanity! Why? Because they now have a place to display it; a place where it's encouraged - heavily. Peer pressure has always been existent but never in this way. With the emergence of social media, comes a new way for kids and young teens to express themselves. Since privacy is extremely important these days, the only other people these kids are exposed to on these networks is their peers - thus creating pressure and encouragement to validate themselves through photos and words on their page. Back before the days of the internet and social networks, one only had to worry about the way they acted in school. Now you have to worry about the way you appear around the clock as these sites are readily available at the click of a button. If you do not represent yourself in a "cool way", you could be the topic of tomorrow's gossip discussion.
I have a 14 year old niece who is constantly signed onto Myspace and Facebook and after seeing her numerous friends' profiles, I sit here in awe at how vain these kids are (or at least pretending to be). It's sad to see these girls try to portray an image that doesn't have to be them at the tender age of 12. One would argue that they should not be on these sites but let's face it - if they want to be on them, they will be on them somehow.
They spend hours in front of the mirror taking photo after photo of themselves with sexy/serious looks in order to obtain the "perfect" one. I cannot sit there and say that I haven't had a moment of vanity myself (as I believe most women have? Maybe? Maybe not?) but the age these kids are starting such behavior is young. My 10 year old niece is also catching on to the trend and I wonder of the pressure to maintain a constant image on these networks in morphing today's children in a negative way. If I could post the photos of 10 friends of my nieces' at random, you would understand (and quite possibly be shocked!) but due to the underage issue, I am not allowed to do that. While social media is providing both children and adults numerous opportunity, we face the growing negativities associated with these new mediums as well. What are the long term effects of these networks when it comes to bullying, vanity and more?
Facebook Is Getting More "Social"
This is definitely not new news but something I keep noticing and appreciating; the ability to comment on people's Facebook feed activity. I have seen endless conversations via a person's status update and really believe this was a great move. They have integrated the functionality of a traditional forum thread into the platform and now more than ever people are debating politics, helping eachother with issues and creating more of a social environment than the typical Facebook wall can provide. These comments show up visibly on the feeds while signing in and encourage the average user to chime in. Friends of one person can communicate where they wouldn't otherwise have the opportunity to do so thus creating more networking opportunities. I can't say enough about this feature. Take advantage of it if you haven't already!

Facebook's Best Application Yet
According to my favorite Facebook blog, the new Facebook Voter Registration App which was launched on September 25th, has gotten 40,000 people to register. This number is staggering compared to the amount that may have registered had there not been an application designed for this purpose. When turning 18, most students are not given the opportunity to register so easily and this tool has only made the process far quicker and available to the majority of new voters.
To see that a mere social networking app has done so much in so little time is truly inspiring and certainly makes the positive side of technology a bit clearer in a day where we continuously hear of how it is negatively influencing society. This is a great move by Facebook and could truly have an impact on this year's election as young voters are more engaged than ever!
Additionally, the official campaigns, political parties and PACs are using the Facebook medium as a way to influence hundreds of thousands of more voters.
Here you can find 2008 Facebook Statistics on American Politics. What an exciting time to witness politics, no matter how crazy the race may be and again, kudos to Facebook for creating this modern way of voter registration!
Facebook – Mixing Personal With Business
Lately I've been making a lot of business connections, and the majority of them have a Facebook page and have been kindly adding me. I've been accepting them with the desire to connect more with them and see what they're up to. There is, however, one problem.... my Facebook was created during my "pre-professional" days. What does this mean?
This means that there are photos of me out and about in Manhattan and in my college dorms, maybe doing some funny questionable things, as well as pictures of my family and close friends. I know they always say, "Don't put anything on the web that will come back to haunt you," but these photos truly aren't that bad (but certainly may make you lose a bit of professional credibility), and with Facebook's privacy controls, you can prevent the outer world from logging on.
The question is, do I create a professional business profile for Facebook? I barely have time to update my social networks as of now, so the thought of having to maintain two Facebook profiles makes me cringe. The question: How do you handle it, exactly? Do you simply make your profile "business friendly," or would that take away the "you" factor that your friends (old and new) love so much about you.
That puts into mind the question of how to best handle your social networks as these days, more and more professionals are connecting on them. I would love to hear and add feedback on the subject. What have you experienced?
*Update - 7/15/10: I still see traffic coming in on here so I figured I'd let you know that I've been maintaining 2 for a while now. It's true that personal contacts never really comment on industry-related posts and I like to have the other account to read industry-news and keep in touch with business contacts but I go in waves where I'm pretty active on the business account and then other waves where I'm totally dead. It definitely is difficult to maintain two and I must admit, my personal one gets 10x more attention but it is good to have the business one - particularly since Facebook has made it nearly impossible to personalize your settings now for each respective group of people in your life.
Kate Dickman
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