Sort by:
  1. Added Mar 15, 2009 by dmby and 1 other
    Discussion of social networking and status updates, plus what keeps people motivated to participate.
  2. Added Feb 16, 2009 by jenn.m.stevens and 1 other
    "Now, anything you upload to Facebook can be used by Facebook in any way they deem fit, forever, no matter what you do later. Want to close your account? Good for you, but Facebook still has the right to do whatever it wants with your old content. They can even sublicense it if they want."
  3. Added Dec 07, 2008 by jenn.m.stevens
    Clay Shirkey (author of Here Comes Everybody) looks at James Grimmelmann's paper on the privacy issues of Facebook.
  4. Added Sep 05, 2007 by uma
    The online hangout Facebook is opening another window to the outside world, letting nonusers for the first time search for members' personal profile pages.
  5. Added Aug 21, 2007 by trustteam
    For longtime users, the influx of grownups means that information once intended for a circle of fellow students is now available for anyone to see. That has introduced a new social conundrum: deciding whose invites should be accepted -- and how much of your profile they should be able to see. "You can't really unfriend your mom," says Hillary Woolley, a junior at the University of California at Davis. "So I've been upping my privacy settings."
  6. Added Aug 21, 2007 by trustteam
    MySpace.com has found and deleted profiles of 29,000 convicted sex offenders, more than four times the initial 7,000 profiles they claimed in May. The numbers were discovered after MySpace turned over info detailing the offenders they had removed from the service. MySpace turned over the records after states filed a formal legal request.
  7. Added Aug 17, 2007 by trustteam
    Sophos created a profile for a fake Facebook user named Freddi Staur (that’s “ID Fraudster,” anagrammed) and sent friend requests to 200 other randomly chosen Facebookers. In the end, 87 people made Freddi a friend, and nearly all of them shared some personal information — like their e-mail addresses or dates of birth — with the stranger.
  8. Added Aug 16, 2007 by jmfrancis
    The folks at Pew Internet and American Life Project have released the full results of their study examining teen privacy in social networks. From the study, teens seem to have developed a nuanced, culturally-informed viewpoint on how to engage in social networking sites. They largely share information with their friend groups...
  9. Added Jul 26, 2007 by trustteam
    Online predators are a smaller risk than the public is led to believe by the media and by law enforcement officials.
  10. Added Jul 13, 2007 by trustteam and 2 others
    Jen Wagner, said her daughter was just like millions of other young people who thought that just because their Facebook or MySpace page was set to "private," their photos would remain that way. "They don't realize how many people can eventually see these photos," she said. And more on privacy in general in article
FirstPrevious...1234...NextLast