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View Full Version : Social Networking Services Know Who You Are


Hooch Tan
09-10-2010, 08:30 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.focus.com/fyi/information-technology/shared-too-much-facebook-google-apple/' target='_blank'>http://www.focus.com/fyi/informatio...k-google-apple/</a><br /><br /></div><p><em>"In order to use any facebook application, the user must agree to the terms of use, which include accrss to their personal information.&nbsp; Decide not to download the application?&nbsp; Too bad.&nbsp; If your friend decides to use an application, that platform can access your personal information."</em></p><p><img src="http://images.thoughtsmedia.com/resizer/thumbs/size/600/dht/auto/1284142510.usr20447.jpg" style="border: 1px solid #d2d2bb;" /></p><p>Security, privacy and convenience all rarely work together.&nbsp; You usually have to compromise on at least one thing in order to have the others.&nbsp; This is especially true with social networking sites such as Facebook.&nbsp; In some ways, it really makes me wonder why people are complaining about privacy on Facebook and its brethren.&nbsp; The whole purpose of sites like Facebook is to share information, not hide it.&nbsp; You put things up on Facebook so that your friends, family, and maybe even the whole world knows what you have been doing.&nbsp; My general policy follows a quote supposedly from Benjamin Franklin, "Three can keep a secret, if two of them are dead."&nbsp; If there is something you do not want anyone to know, do not post it, do not record it.&nbsp; Keep it tucked away in that little box you have under your bed.&nbsp; Assume that anything you send on the Internet can be copied, altered and redistributed at any time.&nbsp; Assume that anything you do on the Internet is recorded in one fashion or another.&nbsp; When it comes to technology, there is very little in the way of privacy anymore.</p>