Facebook Privacy III.
Daitch: Facebook can not be trusted. Orwellian takeover of a single platform is a dystopian future; http://j.mp/b9EFBm
Daitch: Facebook can not be trusted. Orwellian takeover of a single platform is a dystopian future; http://j.mp/b9EFBm
Gerrit Eicker 09:25 on 12. May 2010 Permalink |
Daitch: “In a landscape of nomadic, transient social-media users, Facebook could be supplanted if they don’t change for the good of the people who use their services. Who knows, some bloggers have already taken a stand by making radical suggestions on how old media can take the mantle back. But that’s not all. The fight for social networking and privacy has picked up momentum within the developer community. Though just a blip the size of the tip of a needle, a start-up called Diaspora, founded by a group of college-aged developers, is thinking ambitiously enough to take Facebook on, using privacy as the centerpiece of their endeavor. Now, if only Mark Zuckerberg could identify with that.“
Facebook Privacy IV. « Wir sprechen Online. 14:33 on 12. May 2010 Permalink |
[…] Inside Facebook analysis: some Facebook privacy issues are real, some are not; http://j.mp/b4Z0Ch […]
Diaspora « Wir sprechen Online. 09:20 on 15. May 2010 Permalink |
[…] A life after Facebook? Diaspora, the Anti-Facebook project rockets to $120K in online donations; http://j.mp/crsP0C […]
ReclaimPrivacy « Wir sprechen Online. 14:22 on 17. May 2010 Permalink |
[…] Scan your Facebook privacy settings via ReclaimPrivacy, an independent and open tool; http://j.mp/9EvyEB […]
Facebook Privacy V. « Wir sprechen Online. 09:12 on 2. June 2010 Permalink |
[…] Privacy V. EFF summary: Facebook privacy changes inspire praise, optimism, and skepticism; http://j.mp/couzQY […]
Facebook Privacy VII. « Wir sprechen Online. 14:29 on 30. August 2010 Permalink |
[…] Privacy VII. Solis: The idea of privacy and publicity are at odds. Facebook and the new age of privacy; http://j.mp/bzi0ug […]
Facebook Privacy VIII. « Wir sprechen Online. 09:30 on 18. January 2011 Permalink |
[…] Facebook: You need to explicitly choose to share [address, mobile number] before [3rd parties] can access; http://eicker.at/24 […]