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Give Up the Fight For Personal Privacy?

Posted by kdawson on Tue Oct 07, 2008 04:29 PM
from the they-know-anyway dept.
KlaymenDK writes "Over the last decade or so, I have strived to maintain my privacy. I have uninstalled Windows, told my friends 'sorry' when they wanted me to join Facebook, had a fight with my brother when he wanted to move the family email hosting to Gmail, and generally held back on my personal information online. But since, amongst all of my friends, I am the only one doing this, it may well be that my battle is lost already. Worse, I'm really putting myself out of the loop, and it is starting to look like self-flagellation. Indeed, it is a common occurrence that my wife or friends will strike up a conversation based on something from their Facebook 'wall' (whatever that is). Becoming ever more unconnected with my friends, live or online, is ultimately harming my social relations. I am seriously considering throwing in the towel and signing up for Gmail, Facebook, the lot. If 'they' have my soul already, I might as well reap the benefits of this newfangled, privacy-less, AJAX-2.0 world. It doesn't really matter if it was me or my friends selling me out. Or does it? I'd love to hear your thoughts on the matter. How many Windows-eschewing users are not also eschewing the social networking services and all the other 2.0 supersites with their dubious end-user license agreements?"
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  • by beef curtains (792692) * on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:29PM (#25292167)

    I'm a Windows-eschewing user who has embraced all things Google...Gmail, Google Docs, Google Calendar (my wife keeps it up to date, which prevents "You didn't tell me we had plans on Friday!" moments). I also have Facebook, Friendster, and LinkedIn profiles.

    It's funny, I went out of my way to keep my social networking site profiles generic (no pictures, no personal info, no personal statements, no likes/dislikes, etc.), and only really used them so that, when friends sent me links saying "Dude, check out this chick I work with" or "Look what this guy we went to high school with us up to now", I could see who they were talking about.

    But what I found out is that, if you know people who have profiles, and those people own digital cameras, and you've ever appeared in any of their pictures, there is a chance that your privacy has already gone up in smoke. Facebook as a very irritating feature called "tagging"...Jenny, an avid Facebook user, takes a picture of their friends Bob, Susan and Mike. Jenny then uploads that picture to her Facebook profile and "tags" that picture with the names of all the people in it. If any of those people have Facebook profiles, their names in that tag will link to them. So in this case, this picture would be tagged with Bob, Susan and Mike. Congratulations, your face is now on the web, and has a name attached to it. This tagging feature is optional, but I've found that it seems to be quite popular.

    So despite my efforts to keep my image & life details to myself, this has been undermined many times over by Facebook fanatics who have tagged pictures of me, and have added "helpful" details about how the picture was taken at my wife's cousin's wedding, complete with dates & locations.

    Your privacy is gone, my friend. You might as well suck it up & try to look at the silver lining: it is sorta fun to make contact with old classmates and to laugh at ex-girlfriends who've really let themselves go.

    • I basically made a facebook account so I could remove tags.

      I have no applications installed. Installing ONE removes your opt-out.

        • by gstoddart (321705) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @09:02PM (#25294829) Homepage

          I understand your personal preference, but it's worth keeping in mind that Facebook are not immune from data protection rules either. If they are holding personal information about you without your consent, and worse, sharing it with others, then they may well be breaking the law in some jurisdictions.

          Is that true, or merely an assertion?

          I ask, because if Sue posts a picture she took, to her site, and your face is in it and linked to your profile ... then they are holding the information that Sue gave them (legitimately) and the fact that you're incidentally in it is irrelevant to your personal stuff. Because, it's now her personal stuff as well.

          In a wired universe, it can get a little more indirect in terms of if it's "your" information or not.

          I'm just not sure most privacy laws would be strong enough to cover this case, and it might come down to a matter of whose informed consent is needed. And, moreover, what is the threshold at which Facebook gets to say they acted in good faith and be absolutely correct about it.

          Heck, as an avid photographer, I would say that if I took a photo of a crowd or in public, and you were in it (butt naked, vomiting, and with someone other than your wife) then I just have to say ... don't do things in public you might not want seen or photographed. Posting it to Facebook all nicely tagged with metadata and cross-referenced with your friends ... well, that's just asking for it.

          Cheers

        • by dangitman (862676) on Wednesday October 08 2008, @01:21AM (#25296449)

          I almost wish a few people who still value privacy would start filing formal complaints with the appropriate courts/regulatory authorities, so social networking sites get the message that they only get to collect data with people's informed consent.

          That just brings us right back to the questions posted in this writeup. Taking legal action is just going to alienate your Facebook using friends even more.

          What I find the most ironic, is that in the earlyish days of the web (and before that, USENET), I was an active participant in online communities. For that, I would often be labeled as an anti-social dork. But today, I'm labeled an anti-social dork because I don't participate in most online communities. Sigh.

    • by Moridineas (213502) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:37PM (#25292283) Journal

      So despite my efforts to keep my image & life details to myself, this has been undermined many times over by Facebook fanatics who have tagged pictures of me, and have added "helpful" details about how the picture was taken at my wife's cousin's wedding, complete with dates & locations.

      I agree, the helpful details etc are annoying as anything. You can, however, UNTAG yourself from photos! If you care about privacy (as you clearly do, and I do as well), I would highly recommend untagging yourself.

      • by khasim (1285) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:41PM (#25292351)

        Add photos that you aren't in and tag them as you.

        Then add backstory for them.

        This photo was taken at my sister's friend's cousin's lesbian wedding in Monaco. That's me on lead guitar.

        Since you cannot always hide information. You can always try to obscure the facts with the fallacies.

        • by beef curtains (792692) * on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:54PM (#25292561)

          This photo was taken at my sister's friend's cousin's lesbian wedding in Monaco. That's me on lead guitar.

          While your whole suggested "backstory" made me chuckle, the "lead guitar" bit was the cherry on top.

          The big problem that came to mind is that, were I to try this idea, 80 people would leave Captain-Obvious-style comments on said photo:

          "Dude, that's not you"
          "Who is that guy?"
          "OMG UR SOOOOO FUNY THATS NOT U"
          "lol thats not you man!!1!"
          "You crack me up, just like you did last Friday at that party you guys had at your place at 1234 W. Main St. in downtown Whoville, corner of Main and 1st (Main is one way going east...if you pass the Kwik-E-Mart you've gone too far). Have fun on your two week vacation during which time your apartment, unit 2E, which has no security system and a bedroom window that unlatches if you jiggle it hard enough, will be empty!"

          Okay, maybe that last one was a bit over the top...but you know what I mean :)

        • by Mr. Bad Example (31092) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:56PM (#25292581) Homepage

          > Add photos that you aren't in and tag them as you.
          >
          > Then add backstory for them.

          They'll still be able to tell those photos aren't you.

          None of the people in them will have tinfoil hats on.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:57PM (#25292615)

          Security by obscurity has never really worked. I predict it won't protect your privacy either.
              --Sincerely, Anonymous Coward

            • by hbush (130363) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @06:39PM (#25293745)

              > it's like saying writing your password on a post-it stuck to your monitor is a good security practice because security by obscurity doesn't work.

              However writing _incorrect_ password on a post-it note stuck to your monitor works quite well :)

              • by Redfeather (1033680) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @07:09PM (#25294019) Homepage
                Or the real opposite. My presense on the web is fairly transparent - Facebook, my domain - and because of this and my perspective on involvement, I'm not anonymous, but it is very hard to slander me. This, in my experience, is better than letting my image run unchecked because of my opting out.
        • by Rinisari (521266) * on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:12PM (#25292805) Homepage Journal

          Seriously. When sites and places ask for personal information ("where were you born", "first car", "first person you dated"), use false facts, but simply remember them. I've started doing that now with nonsense answers. If I'm stupid enough forget my password and can't remember the nonsense, I'll call the place or email them. If they don't have something in place beyond that, they don't deserve my time and information.

          • by cayenne8 (626475) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @06:41PM (#25293757) Homepage Journal
            "Seriously. When sites and places ask for personal information ("where were you born", "first car", "first person you dated"), use false facts, but simply remember them. I've started doing that now with nonsense answers. If I'm stupid enough forget my password and can't remember the nonsense, I'll call the place or email them. If they don't have something in place beyond that, they don't deserve my time and information."

            I've been doing that for years....on my grocery store discount cards and other accounts, they think I'm a 68 year old hispanic lady named Matilda Jenkins, who speaks with a lisp, is on welfare and drives a Ferrari.

            Make things like this fun...come up with different personas that make no sense whatsoever, I think it is fun to try to really skew their data in strange new ways.

      • by cayenne8 (626475) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:55PM (#25292571) Homepage Journal
        I dunno...I just don't find the need to have a facebook or myspace page..etc.

        I too have declined to open one, privacy reasons being one of the many reasons, but, I don't find that it has hurt me any.

        For one thing...I found that it is not only old people in Korea that use email, I keep in touch with all my friends via email. And not just jokes...we have real conversations,a nd often interesting threads with groups of us on things like political debate. We just don't broadcast it publicly and render it searchable forever.

        Also, believe it or not....the phone still is a great way to communicate when you can't be there in person.

        I warn people when I can to tell them NOT to put too much out there publicly....some that haven't listened...have already been bitten in the ass by it...and learn their lesson the hard way.

        And I gotta say....with the economy getting in bad shape...jobs are gonna get a bit harder to get. And with it already known that many employers NOW search the internet for background on you, putting pics of you out there sucking the skull bong are NOT going to help you any at all.

        Bitch about it not being fair to not get a job based on what you do on your own time, or back when you were younger, but, that is how it is today.

        On the other hand...maybe I should encourage more people to put stupid shit information like that about themselves on the internet, that will just take them out of competition with me for a good job.

        :)

        • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:51PM (#25293271)

          I encountered the opposite situation that you described:

          I was not allowed to join a closed mailing list for malware researchers due to the fact that I am not googleable. Had I spread my identity all over the net, had a personal homepage that accurately described me and my skills, had spread comments on my thoughts to various topics of my interest under my real name on the net etc. I probably would have been accepted. But the mentioned mailing list does not want to empower criminal or dubious individuals with working state-of-the-art malicious code so a good googleable online reputation within the community is very valuable.

          Therefore I now am faced with the worry that my next potential employer might do the same. I mean, would you google a prospective employee? I would. And now imagine you had two potential employees, one who made a really good impression but you can not find anything about him on the net and a second guy who made a mediocre or even a good or maybe also a really good impression AND you find lots of positive things on the net about him. Like how people like him, blog entries about his specialization and generally: published advances to his profession like participation on public high profile mailing lists, published articles and write-ups, proof-of-concept code etc.

          It is also common in my working field that potential employers initiate a background scan on you. Again: I guess being googleable might be an advantage here.

          The only thing that helps me in this regard and that I have now but did not have when I applied for approval to the mentioned malware analysis group are my googleable certifications.

          ____________________
          Mod all ACs as +1 in this thread as insightful comments might easily be written by ACs in this thread due to the topic.

        • by Lumpy (12016) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @08:51PM (#25294751) Homepage

          Exactly. Those that think they MUST have a facebook and myspace are nuts. I keep in contact with my friends by going to be with them. you know leaving you home and interacting outside the home.

          My friend in high school that moved to kenya and I havent seen in 12 years? screw him if he cant email me or write me. I will not waste my time to go read his, their ,your facebook wall and shuffle through all the inane nonsense. The ones I know best have a blog that is modern enough to have an RSS feed so I can get updates automagically.

          Facebook and myspace and other sites are utter crap as they require you to go and waste hours there digging through the crap. Decent things will allow you to gather and sort automatically so I can get the friends and family overview in 5 minutes every day.

          And no, I ignore requests by friend s to subscribe to their twitter. I dont want to know that you just went poop.

    • by KiahZero (610862) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:39PM (#25292321)

      You can control tags of you in your Facebook privacy settings.

    • by lurker4hire (449306) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:29PM (#25293025) Homepage

      privacy isn't about keeping secrets, keeping yourself isolated, but instead about having the power to decide who has access to things you would rather keep "private". very few people keep everything private, in fact most humans, social creatures that we are, need to share otherwise private things with trusted friends and family.

      there came a point for me when I realized that the benefits of sharing day to day details of my life with my "friends" outweighed my anxiety over sharing them. to share the types of details that tools like fb allow previously required constant, repetitive physical contact (i.e. being in high school), but online i've strengthened valued social bonds that were very tenuous before due to geography or passage of time (and contrary to popular opinion, you can simply reject those who you would have rejected by not associating with before)

      if you have balanced social life you will likely find some use for fb etc, in terms that it increases potential social encounters.

      however if you are socially insecure in some way you may

      a) become overly dependent of online social tools as a means of reassuring yourself that you are socially relevant

      or

      b) avoid them all like the plague despite the fact that all your friends are organizing their social lives there (thus reducing your opportunities for social contact and feeding a self fulfilling "bah i'm better than them anyways" attitude)

      the main problem with most social web tools is that there is a lack of transparency over how they handle your information on the backend (fb for example, sure you can pretty closely control how your friends see your data, but what about all those annoying apps and fb the company itself? how can i know, in detail, what they're gonna do with my info? heck, it's not even crystal clear who has access to what info wrt applications)

      l4h

    • by philspear (1142299) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:53PM (#25293285)

      I hate to use a slashdot meme, and I'm not making the argument that just because something has no apperant real ramifications, it's not a serious issue, but what's so bad about pictures of you being online? You already have your images taken hundreds of times a week, anytime you walk past a bank, into almost any store, whenever you use an ATM.

      If you're not famous, the only people who are interested in pictures of you on vacation are people you already know. The one real concern I've seen is if someone posts a picture of you drinking and a prospective employer sees it. That is a concern, and a reason to detag a photo of yourself drinking. Of course, it's an extremely stupid employer who is concerned about that type of thing in the first place, and I maintain that you're better off not working there, but I also realize it's unfortunately not always that simple.

      I feel like I'm missing something. Is it more than just the principle of your right to privacy and not looking bad to future employers?

      • by kelnos (564113) <bjt23@NOsPAm.cornell.edu> on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:46PM (#25293211) Homepage

        As far as I'm concerned, social networking sites are a total waste of time that are suited for teenagers.

        So basically your entire thesis is "I personally haven't found a use for Facebook, so I declare it to be a useless waste of time suited to a demographic that 'real adults' consider a bunch of immature fools."

        Do I even need to point out how stupid that is?

        Guess what? Not everyone finds LinkedIn useful. That doesn't make it a waste of time, does it?

  • Science-fiction author David Brin got quite a bit of attention here on Slashdot when he began talking some years ago about how one cannot preserve privacy in the modern world, and that what we have to do instead is adapt to people knowing so much about us. See his book The Transparent Society [amazon.com] .
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:56PM (#25292591)

      I was hoping someone would mention that.

      This whole obsession with privacy is a little hard to understand at times. Personally, I just don't see the point in trying to prevent your name or photo from ever appearing online. True, there have been cases of identity theft using information on Facebook, but it's not worth worrying about if you're careful and limit your profile to just general information.

      I don't know. I think the world is super paranoid today. It never bothers me when someone in another country knows my full name. Or when my picture has been uploaded somewhere. Or when Google records the stuff I search for online. Who really cares? There are tens of thousands of users for every employee who has access to that data, and frankly it's a little self-centered to think one of them cares even remotely about what YOU searched for.

      Privacy is important for some things, but it's not this magical state that makes you immune to anything ever going wrong in your life again. Keep some things secret, and stop being so damn paranoid about everything else. Yeah, Gmail scans your emails for keywords. So what? Nobody other than a machine is going to read your letters, and even if they did, nobody is going to care that you wrote a saucy message to your girlfriend (or wife, or whatever).

      I don't have a Facebook account, because I don't have any use for one. Most of my friends stay in contact via email and chatroom conversations. We have no use for an AJAX site where we can tell everyone what mood we're in and what goth music we're listening to this week. Okay, so maybe I have a personal gripe with most online networking site, as they tend to be populated with attention-whoring kids who think write text on a bright yellow background is perfectly readable. But even when used properly, those sites just don't fill any specific need of my social life.

      If you're paranoid about identity theft, don't use your credit card online. Don't post your contact details anywhere, or your SSN (or any equivalent national ID in your country). But really, there's no need to be so absurdly paranoid about your photo, even when captioned by your full name. Nobody cares about you! I'm sorry to be blunt, but really, nobody is going to see your picture and then suddenly decide to pursue more information (unless you happen to be quite a dashing young man).

      This world is full of people who are all worried about themselves. We have our own problems, and we probably spend our private time doing all the same things you do. It really, really isn't a big deal if some of your life makes its way onto the digital world. Nobody is going to care about it anyway.

      • by postbigbang (761081) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:04PM (#25292709)

        You need to understand respect for those that desire privacy. Just because you're an exhibitionist doesn't mean that we are. We can be private in our thoughts, deeds, and actions. Anonymity also insulates you against the whims of government, and organizations that don't have your best interests in mind.

        I don't care if anyone knows about me or not; those that do are certainly in touch, and not under the auspices of soul-rendering EULAs from Facebook, MySpace, Plaxo, LinkedIn, or any other 'social site'.

        Your broadly cast seeming truisms are indeed false, and suit you, and you and others that agree with it. There are many of us that don't. Privacy is part of liberty, and liberty an essential part of freedom. I give up neither just so that others can use a seeming social network to keep in touch with me. There's email, snail mail, and simple phone calls. Oh yeah-- the best one-- face to face visits.

      • Your comment about identity theft got me thinking:

        Is it harder to steal someone's identity when it's well known to be theirs?

        I mean, if my picture is on the internet, and everyone knows my full name and basically where I live and what I do for a living, how easy is it for someone to come and steal my identity in a way that I can't refute? Instead of spending years untangling the thread and trying to convince the legal system that *I'm* me, and someone else ISN'T, maybe I can just point to the preponderance of evidence that I am who I say I am.

        Is this the same sort of thing that we strive for with using OSS in voting machines? By exposing everything, have we actually tightened security? If my SIN (or SSN) is available on the internet on my facebook page, next to all those pictures of me from the time I was 8 years old to the present, does anyone really have a hope of stealing my identity?

        I suppose identity theft normally works by stealing essential bits of your identity and using them from the shadows, but in a system where a bright light is shone on all the little dark spots, would it be possible anymore? Hmm.

        (I do, actually, understand the desire for privacy for certain things; the adage that if you don't have anything to hide, you shouldn't worry is retarded. The next time someone asks that of you, ask how many times a week they have sex, or what the results of their last prostate exam was. Just because there's nothing illegal or actually embarrassing about the information doesn't mean that it isn't worth keeping secret.)

      • by Deagol (323173) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:31PM (#25293043) Homepage
        My position is that the powerful have more to lose from a breakdown of privacy than the "private" citizen has to fear.

        Unfortunately, the evidence thus far seems to contradict what you hope for.

        The problem is, those with power have (wait for it...) power. They can act with blatant disregard of the law, but they still have strong influence over those who write, enforce, and interpret the laws. At the very least, they an afford the high cover charge for what passes for justice these days. Sure, we're thrown the occasional bone for the sake of political theater, but that's really all it is.

        The current veep weathered the incident of shooting his buddy in the face far better than your typical run-of-the-mill hunter would have. There was a SLC city councilman who, maybe 10 years ago, ditched his car while soused and he got off with a wink and a nod. You think anyone posting/reading Slashdot would have survived the same child porn incident Pete Townshend did with their lives intact?

        A transparent society wouldn't level the field, but would make the imbalance of power even worse. Evidence we currently have for the misdeeds of powerful people hardly makes a dent as it is. What makes anyone think that giving *them* more ammunition against the rest of us would accomplish?

  • by i_ate_god (899684) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:37PM (#25292293)

    So, instead of going to a bar to discuss things where I can overhear them, you lay it all out on your facebook profile instead, where I can overread them.

    So what? Who cares if your likes or dislikes are posted for all to see?

    I LIKE JUNO REACTOR AND SEX

    See? Was that so hard? Has my life become worse now that you know this? Facebook isn't going to make your life any less private than when your girlfriend talks to her girlfriends about your impotence. Stop being so paranoid. This isn't a new world of TOTAL INFORMATION AWARENESS.

  • I don't get it... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Otter (3800) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:38PM (#25292303) Journal
    I'm not sure what the motivation is here. Either "privacy" is some sort of religious thing for you, in which case giving up Facebook is a small price to pay, or it's a pragmatic matter, in which case you can make a decision about what the pros and cons are for you instead of asking us.

    If you're asking whether I personally am impressed by someone bragging about how he refuses to use Facebook or GMail: it impresses me about as much as someone who brags about not having heard of some television show.
    • by Bogtha (906264) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:56PM (#25292593)

      If you're asking whether I personally am impressed by someone bragging about how he refuses to use Facebook or GMail: it impresses me about as much as someone who brags about not having heard of some television show.

      In fact, the entire submission reads like a pastiche of Area Man Constantly Mentioning He Doesn't Own A Television [theonion.com]. I understand wanting to protect your privacy, but this guy really does seem to treasure the fact that he is clueless about Facebook etc. Whenever I've ever heard anybody say anything like "their Facebook 'wall' (whatever that is), it's always been with a condescending "I'm too good for crap like that" tone. This guy doesn't want privacy, he wants to feel better than everybody else.

  • Reverse (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rinisari (521266) * on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:39PM (#25292317) Homepage Journal

    I'm a privacy guy, too, or at least I was until things like Facebook and blogs come around.

    Now, instead of trying to keep everything secret, I think it's easier to assume that everything is known. Some things simply have access controls to modify them or see extended information or are otherwise secured by information that assuredly only I know: passphrases (not passwords).

    There's also a key element here: I don't do anything illegal and I'm honest with friends and family. One might say, "What happens when you do?" to which I will reply, "Then I guess I'm going to jail like I should." If someone comes to me with beef about something I wrote, then it's up to me to defend my position.

    If I want to pass or store information securely, I'll use PGP or other virtually impenetrable encryption with good secret key protection practices, such as keeping them in my head.

    • by maillemaker (924053) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:54PM (#25292563)

      "There's also a key element here: I don't do anything illegal and I'm honest with friends and family. One might say, "What happens when you do?" to which I will reply, "Then I guess I'm going to jail like I should." If someone comes to me with beef about something I wrote, then it's up to me to defend my position."

      There is a problem with this position.

      You are making the assumption that nothing will happen in the future to make currently acceptable, moral, lawful behavior illegal.

      If the law changes in such a way as to be tyrannical and you have allowed no possibility for revolt without getting caught you have sealed your fate long before the tyranny came to pass.

    • Re:Reverse (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Hyppy (74366) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:37PM (#25293137)
      The "I have nothing to hide" argument has been covered at great length by Daniel Solove [ssrn.com] (great read, by the way).

      How do you know your lawful activities will always be lawful? Every time I see someone react with "I'm not a criminal" fallacy, all I can think of is the question "Are you now, or have you ever been associated with a member of the Muslim faith?" We're not far away from a witch hunt of that flavor.

      Even putting aside the threat of zealous elected officials with grocery lists, not all of your private information is fit for public consumption. Taken in the wrong context, almost any information about you can be used against you. Have you paid for a bar tab with a credit card? Through a certain lens, you could be painted as a raging drunk. Sure, there could be hundreds of valid explanations, but chances are you won't be present or able to defend yourself.

      I trust the corporations even less. When the only risk that an entity must seriously consider is a possible monetary settlement, then the odds of your best interests being taken seriously are nil. Remember that.
  • Err.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by TheSpoom (715771) * <slashdot@@@uberm00...net> on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:40PM (#25292327) Homepage Journal

    This is a bit over the top. On Facebook, for example, you can restrict practically any information you put into it. Now, Facebook themselves could technically do what they wanted with it, but if you're worried about the information getting out to the internet as a whole, you just go into your preferences and tell it what to make public, friends-only, completely private, or what-have-you, and they'll restrict it as appropriate. Just because most people don't enable this restriction doesn't mean it's not there.

    If you're worried about Facebook selling your information to other entities, etc., take a look at Facebook's privacy policy [facebook.com], which states pretty clearly what they will and will not do with your information.

    I have a feeling, though, that you've already made your decision and just want to hear from others who feel as you do.

    • Re:Err.. (Score:5, Informative)

      by MLCT (1148749) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:03PM (#25292697)
      Facebook implemented without asking anyone anything - until there was a public outcry. [wikipedia.org]

      Facebook made it impossible for you to delete your account - until there was a public outcry.

      "developers" of "applications" can see a great deal of your private data - this has not been fixed - there has not been a public outcry yet.

      If it was private data and how much I choose to let others on the web see then that would be one thing. The issue I see with facebook is that they themselves seem to want to exploit your data at every single stage. Things like the inability to delete your account and "opt-out" services should be the anathema of any business that cares about privacy - instead they nefariously implemented them without consent and defended them until there was outcry. It took a feature piece in the New York Times before they decided to let people delete their accounts. What are they trying to hide?
  • by OglinTatas (710589) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:40PM (#25292333)

    appropriate to this topic:
    cat and girl [catandgirl.com]

  • by fiannaFailMan (702447) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:40PM (#25292337) Journal

    For years I swore that I'd never get a cell phone. I held out admirably until about 2003/04 or thereabouts, but I had to succumb. The reason was that everyone else had one, and social etiquette had moved on to the point where it was considered rude not to call in certain situations, not to return a call promptly, and social events were being organised and plans adjusted with such speed that it was all but impossible to be kept in the loop with a landline and payphones alone.

    It's similar to how there are people who live in rural or suburban areas who would probably love to be able to live without a car, but a lot of the infrastructure and social norms that would have made that feasible in the past are no longer around.

    Society expects you to be able to have personal mobility and instant availability for communication, and it works on the assumption that you do.

    Judging by the experience posted, it looks like some people are holding back on the social networking thing and finding it difficult because of peer pressure pushing them into it. Interesting how society forces a body to conform.

  • by totallygeek (263191) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:40PM (#25292341) Homepage

    So, you don't want anything posted on places like Facebook, showing a list of your friends along with articles you have written, journal entries, ties to items you have posted about, etc. But, you have no problem with the same on Slashdot?

    Four friends listed
    A page filled with your posts to submitted articles
    Three journal entries
    Three fans

    I know some people on Facebook that maintain some privacy: one never fills in all the fields or puts in erroneous information, one puts her middle name as her last name and posts an avatar instead of a photo.

  • by Wee (17189) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:46PM (#25292439)

    I fail to see what Windows has to do with your mini-rant. As a long-time Linux user, I'll shake my tiny fist along with you and tilt at all the windmills I come across, but how have you given up your privacy by using a certain operating system?

    -B

  • by blitzkrieg3 (995849) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:49PM (#25292487)
    You won't give close friends the ability to post on your wall, yet you have no problem letting the whole world know that you were listening to elvis [www.last.fm] 2 hours ago?
  • i consider privacy to include my password to my bank account, what my girlfirend looks like naked, and the details of how i lost my virginity, and a few other things

    i don't really consider anything that goes on in gmail, in windows, or on facebook to equate to my privacy. who does? this information is mined in order to display ads in a side panel on my pc? ok. and your point?

    if you consider that sort of pointless uninteresting minutae of your life to be in the realm of your "privacy" then i and many other people think you are being rather precious and overly dramatic about your life. its really just not that interesting, or worth protecting. most of us have some ability to gauge exactly how absolutely interesting segments of our daily lives and our social circle is, egomaniacs amongst us notwithstanding, and we find it to be rather common and not valuable. precious in total, to ourselves, because it is our lives, but not inherently precious as some sort of vital aspect of humanity. and we know this. and there is no cognitive dissonance about this observation. only within our own personal perspective does this minutiae have value, and in no other persecptive is it even possible to have value. so there is no need to protect anything

    take for example a series of snapshots of a trip to disney world. to the person in those snapshots, they are probably more valuable than the mona lisa. but to most everyone else, they are utterly uninteresting. but, and here's the important part: the person in those snapshots KNOWS they are valuable only to him, such that exposure of those pictures to random people he will never know has no context to his life. it cannot hurt him, their reaction. even if he knew someone was looking at his private pictures and was laughing at them: so what? how can that hurt you? how can it wound you? its completely without relevancy to who and what is important to you, so laugh away. the context in which they laugh has no leverage over your personal life, becuase the judgments being made against you are being made within frameworks that have no impact on how you live your life or how you judge your life, or anyone important to you judges your life

    this level of security about one's personal life is not bizarre, its normal. i am aware there are probably brittle insecure people out there who instead would be hurt and wounded by this scenario. and? its not like their reaction is valid. its only their distorted sense of what they attach their ego to that gives them pain. yes, they are in pain, but according to any coherent sense of morality, no valid reason can be formulated that justifies their pain. their reaction has no valid real context to their lives, despite their false impression that it does. their own misplaced sense of perspective is the source of their pain, not anything that anyone has impositioned them with an abridgement of their "privacy"

    and this is not even something new to the world of the internet. all of us, thorughout all time periods and cultures, have been exposed to judgments about our personal lives by "outsiders". if i go to japan, and i laugh at what japanese people eat, does that hurt the japanese people's feelings? will it change what they eat? is my laughter valid to them in some way? doe sit have any context in their lives? what if a child laughed at my hairdo? or, if i am a teenager, what if an adult tut tutted at my clothing. has my personal space been judged or hurt in any context that is valid and you would take into consideration in changing your personal life?

    its not that people are radically unconcerned about their privacy. its that some people consider things to be "private" and worthy of radical defense that most of us view as completely pointless effluvia. go ahead, make fun of it, expose it to the world. its me, its my personality. and?

  • Is it worth it? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jibjibjib (889679) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:55PM (#25292575) Journal
    Obviously, taken to the extreme, privacy means not communicating with anyone.

    At some point, you have to find the balance between protecting your personal information and actually being able to interact with other people.

    Consider the chance that your life will be somehow ruined by some comment you post on Facebook. It's very low, I think. Now consider how bad you're making life for yourself by refusing to communicate in order to avoid this risk. Is it really worth it?

    I, for one, think the benefit I gain from Web 2.0 sites is generally worth the risk.

  • Lost in the crowd (Score:5, Interesting)

    by harl (84412) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:57PM (#25292611)

    Short Version: No one is going to pay attention to you unless to invite that attention.

    Computers are stupid. The volume of data you're worried about is mind boggling huge. Your google search history is tucked in there with billions on billions of other web requests. If you don't keep cookies between sessions then your thousands of individual search histories are tucked in there with billions of other web requests. This is far too complex for a computer to solve. Someone would have to specifically focus on you to assemble anything useful.

    This is the case with just about everything. The volume of data is so large that unless you're doing something to stand out the fact that they have some of your information is meaningless.

    If you're doing something to stand out then people will focus on you. That's when things get dicey. Until then you just get lost in the crowd.

    Here's what you should ask yourself. Why the fuck would anyone bother with you? I'm not being mean. Seriously who would give a fuck about your web history? Most privacy concerns are simply ego. You're really not as important as you think you are.

    You also fail to mention a lot of things. Do you have cable? Do you have your own internet? Do you only use cash? Do you drive on toll roads? The fact that you focus online and not on some of the worse real world things makes worry about you.

    If you don't pay for literally _everything_ in cash you're giving away infinitely more intimate information than you'll ever find on facebook.

    Do you have a cable box? If so you're entire viewing history ever may be available.

    Your entire web history goes through your ISPs servers. Trivial to log. Are you using an encrypted pipe to a proxy? Do you control that proxy? Physically?

    if you drive on toll roads there may be a record of all your travels. If you use a transponder to auto pay tolls then there must be.

  • by mkcmkc (197982) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:01PM (#25292667)

    I decided quite a while ago that resistance was futile. Most details don't really matter, but it might be prudent to think about what would happen if you ever wanted to run for office or if the political winds shifted further to the right.

    As for me, though, this is not a problem, because I love my country and especially that wonderful President of ours. God has truly blessed us to give us such intelligent, caring, and well-groomed leaders. My goal in life is to someday meet one of them so that I can adore him in person.

      • by 0100010001010011 (652467) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @04:45PM (#25292417)

        Because some of us that hated High School just as much as you did in High School actually managed to make friends in college. It's a great way to keep in touch with people. The "People you may know" has found some long lost friends of mine.

        Yes you enter the argument of "If they were that good of friends I would still talk to them". Adult life (marriage, kids, family, work) leaves little time sometimes for other stuff. It's nice to catch up even once a month with a friend.

        Oh wait. Nevermind, we all just get wasted and show pictures. I don't have any pictures of kids or sports. My mom (!) isn't on facebook. I don't send her messages now and again. Nope. All drunken photos from Last Wednesday.

          • by Troy (3118) on Tuesday October 07 2008, @05:13PM (#25292813)

            Because you can do a little at a time, when you have the time (10 free minutes. Let's see what my college buddy did today)

            Because its really not that much work (you make it sound like it takes hours and hours)

            Because there is an entire social norm set up around calling people that doesn't necessarily fit into a person's schedule. (why do you think people spend 2 minutes sending a text message that would have taken 20 seconds to call and say). This is doubly true for far-flung friends that you haven't talked to in a while.

            Because you can't show someone pictures of your trip to Spain over the phone.

            Because reconnecting with lost friends is both fun and difficult. "YAY! I found you. Do we have anything to talk about now, or are we just warm memories from days gone by"

            Because of any number of other reasons that make perfect sense to the person doing it. If they don't make sense to you, well, that's completely irrelevant. It's not about you.

            I resisted Facebook for a long time. As a high school teacher, my profile is completely private and a religiously de-tag myself on people's albums. I joined it this summer at the urging of a friend, and have really enjoyed being able to reconnect with far-flung friends. It's a poor surrogate for that shared experience that underlays many friendships, but it is better than nothing when someone is several time zones away.