Quote:
Originally Posted by sheyn
Our you so certain that just by setting your privacy settings that you are secure ?
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The answer to that question is no... and as far as the main question posited in these articles whether social networking means the end of privay... my answer again is no it doesn't. It just means the end of privacy as we knew it until 2003 - 2005. With new web 2.0 style technologies which include social networking sites, we as users need to be more cognizant of our actions in the public sphere. No one is forcing us to share our private lives on social networking sites... it's a conscious decision that we make, so the onus is on us to educate ourselves on how the information we disclose can be used in different ways.
Facebook and Google are two of those companies on the internet that have really bad privacy provisions and yet people use their services without even taking the time to read the fine print. I personally am a big fan of google and also use facebook sparingly... but I'm very particular about the types of interactions I engage in using their various services because I am aware of the types of privacy clauses in their end-user agreements.
The only thing which I think service providers need to do is make privacy information more accessible to end-users, but other than that, it's the end-user's responsibility to ensure they differentiate between what's private and what's public about their lives.