FACEBOOK'S PRIVACY CHANGES



Read More: Legal News and Notices

WHEN WILL IT GO TOO FAR (and will you even notice)?

Posted by Larry Dignan, March 29th, 2010,  http://www.zdnet.com/

Much of what you need to know about Facebook’s proposed privacy changes boils down to timing: Friday, 3:04 p.m. PDT. Why is the timing important? That’s when you typically roll out news you don’t want folks to pay a lot of attention to.

For instance, some companies have famously issued profit warnings on a Friday before a four-day July 4 weekend. The news cycle may have compressed or even disappeared, but for the average bear—the poor fellow who can’t possibly keep up with Facebook’s open site governance the news cycle exists. You sort of tune out on weekends.

So what’s Facebook trying to downplay? Try a proposed privacy setting change where Facebook will share user data with external sites automatically. Perhaps it’s an improvement to Facebook Connect that’ll change your life. Or it’s just creepy. In either case, here’s the excerpt:

Pre-Approved Third-Party Websites and Applications. In order to provide you with useful social experiences off of Facebook, we occasionally need to provide General Information about you to pre-approved third party websites and applications that use Platform at the time you visit them (if you are still logged in to Facebook). Similarly, when one of your friends visits a pre-approved website or application, it will receive General Information about you so you and your friend can be connected on that website as well (if you also have an account with that website). In these cases we require these websites and applications to go through an approval process, and to enter into separate agreements designed to protect your privacy. For example, these agreements include provisions relating to the access and deletion of your General Information, along with your ability to opt-out of the experience being offered. You can also remove any pre-approved website or application you have visited here [add link], or block all pre-approved websites and applications from getting your General Information when you visit them here [add link].

In other words, the sharing with everyone move by Facebook makes a little more sense. Facebook will now share your data with a bunch of partners. It’s Facebook Beacon done right (for Facebook).

Now back to the timing. Facebook’s timing is notable and tells us more than we need to know about the proposed privacy changes.  On cue, all of the folks that pay attention to Facebook’s privacy moves closely—TechCrunch, ReadWriteWeb, Louis Gray and Inside Facebook—rang the alarm bells. After all, do we really want to share information with sites screened by Facebook and not the user? And just as the oldest media trick would dictate, the hubbub was fierce on Saturday and Sunday and played out by Monday—just in time for you not to notice. Weekend revolutions don’t quite work.

Bottom line: Most folks—you know the ones that are sharing every detail of their lives with everyone on the Web when Facebook changed its settings the last time—will never opt out of the sharing with third party sites. Facebook’s privacy setting are open and in sort-of-kind-of English, but the frequent changes mean that most users won’t know what’s going on.

Your data will be shared with sites Facebook chooses. Just trust Facebook and everything will be just swell.

The big question here is what happens when Facebook pushes too far. Will people deactivate accounts? I’ve been a click away three times in recent months, but have refrained. I wonder how many other people have also thought about nuking their Facebook account. At some point, Facebook will push too hard. It’s a matter of “when” not “if.”
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Posted for you here by:  Lyn Mullins

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About the Author: Lyn Mullins

Member Since: 02/20/2009

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Comments



Private Eyes

Thanks so much for sharing this Lyn. I am one that would have totally missed this vital bit of information. You are so right about the timing of events. The big corporation I work for always announces their major changes to employee benefits on Friday afternoon at 4:30 PM. It's been that way for 27 years, without fail.

Debi Talbert — Wed, 04/07/2010 - 3:17pm

WOW

Thanks for the info Lyn!

Vikki Lawson — Wed, 04/07/2010 - 6:47pm

Great Article Lyn,

Wow Lyn, I did not know anything about this,
Thank You for the information !

Steven Squillace — Wed, 04/07/2010 - 7:29pm

Lyn, Thanks for update

Now I will have to look into this. Thanks for sharing this information and I am with Steven, I didn't know about this either.
Thanks for update.

Therese Catanzano — Wed, 04/07/2010 - 11:41pm

Facebook Gets in our Face Again!

Thanks for the input. I wasn't aware of this. Sneaky, sneaky!

Sabrina Coffin — Thu, 04/08/2010 - 11:29am

"Perfect Timing"! (For the Corporation)

Good Job of informing the masses, Lyn! As usual, there are tricks that most of us haven't a clue about, such as the Friday at 4PM rollout. I, for one, had never heard of this policy. In retrospect though, it makes perfect sense for corporations who have to dispense controversial news to do it at the time when they would have the least public exposure. As Sabrina said earlier, it is sneaky, but it is still legal, which is what they care about.

Carl Chase — Thu, 04/08/2010 - 1:17pm

I'm a user of Facebook. This

I'm a user of Facebook. This is very helpful. Thanks Lyn for the info. -County Line Nissan

CountyLineNissa... — Mon, 08/01/2011 - 9:32am