Over
the last few years, Facebook's growth has been phenomenal. The world's
no. 1 social networking site also sometime back beat Google to become
the most visited Web site in the US for an entire week at a stretch.
However, the site has also lately being receiving lot of flak for its
privacy policies.
An expert in online privacy drew attention to
the five dangers of sharing information on social networking site
Facebook. Joan Goodchild, senior editor of CSO (Chief Security Officer)
Online, said that marketing efforts by the company often results in a
compromise on account holders' privacy.
Goodchild noted five risks of using Facebook. They are:
Risk 1: Your information is being shared with third parties
According
to Facebook policy last updated on April 2010, "When you connect with
an application or website it will have access to General Information
about you. The term General Information includes your and your friends'
names, profile pictures, gender, user IDs, connections, and any content
shared using the Everyone privacy setting. ... The default privacy
setting for certain types of information you post on Facebook is set to
"everyone." ... Because it takes two to connect, your privacy settings
only control who can see the connection on your profile page. If you are
uncomfortable with the connection being publicly available, you should
consider removing (or not making) the connection."
Risk 2: Privacy settings revert to a less safe default mode after each redesign
In
March, private e-mail according to a Gawker report, private email
addresses that many Facebook users wanted to keep hidden were revealed
publicly on a multitude of Facebook profiles. The glitch was later
resolved by Facebook.
Risk 3: Facebook ads may contain malware
Recently,
a Facebook event invitation was reportedly sent to some over 2,300
friends of Jim Breyer, Accel Partners venture capitalist who sits on
Facebook's board of directors, asking "Would you like a Facebook phone
number?" However, the message was actually a scam and the users who
entered their passwords in response to the message in turn sent the
whole thing to their friends lists too.
"This was a phishing
scam and Jim's account appears to have been compromised," read a
statement from Facebook as provided to venture industry news site
Risk 4: Your friends unknowingly make you vulnerable
On
May 6th, the popular social network patched a major secu
rity bug that
allowed users to snoop on their friends' private chats, and view their
pending friend requests. The exploit forced Facebook to temporarily
disable chat.
Risk 5: Scammers are create fake profiles
Earlier
this week, 15 privacy and consumer protection organizations filed a
complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, all
eging that the site
manipulates privacy settings to make users' personal information
available for commercial use.
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