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Facebook Privacy – End User Awareness and Accountability Lacking June 1, 2010 By Katie Weaver
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A group of 15 US privacy and consumer protection groups filed a complaint with the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) accusing Facebook of “unfair and deceptive” practices and called on the FTC to investigate Facebook’s privacy practices and force it to take steps to guard better against security breaches.
In fairness to Facebook, the social networking company has added several new security tools to help prevent hacking and increased privacy options. But no matter what the FTC finds or what tools Facebook adds, perhaps a better approach to user security and privacy is to ensure users are aware of social networking risks and accountable for what types of information they are willingly sharing?
Some general best practices (and common sense) that all Users should be aware of include:
- Keep your personal information to yourself. Don’t post your full name, Social Security number, address, phone number, or bank and credit card account numbers! Be cautious about posting information that could be used to identify you or locate you offline (school, sports team, where you work, etc.).
- Post only information that you are comfortable with others seeing and knowing about you. Many people can see your page, including your parents, your teachers, the police, the college you might want to apply to, or the job you might want to apply for.
- Remember that once you post information online, you can’t remove it. Even if you delete the information from a site, older versions exist on other people’s computers.
- Adjust Facebook privacy settings to help protect your identity. Facebook has provided several options to protect users online – but it is up to the individual User to be responsible for them!
- Read the Facebook Privacy Guide. At the bottom of every Facebook page, there is a link for “Privacy”. This page contains the latest privacy functions and policies and helps you ensure your privacy settings are properly set.
- Choose your Friends Carefully. Once you have accepted someone as your friend they will be able to access any information about you (including photographs) that you have marked as viewable by your friends. You can remove friends at any time.
Organizations may find it is to their advantage to provide ongoing awareness training and prevention efforts to ensure all personnel (employees, vendors, contractors, volunteers, customers, etc.) understand constantly changing social networking risks and threats and what types of information should or should not be shared.
Schools must also find better ways to provide ongoing online safety awareness to help their students understand escalating risks and threats lurking online if they willingly share too much personal information.
Individual users need to be more accountable for protecting sensitive and personal information. Is it Facebook’s responsibility if users decide to post inappropriate pictures or share their credit card number online?
This Recent article from EdTech News provides resources and 7 Ways to Reduce Online Dangers.
About Awareity
Awareity is a privately held organization founded in 2002. Awareity's innovative e-Management solutions empower organizations to 'connect the dots' and offer a unique focus on implementing lessons learned across several critical areas of business – compliance, information assurance, public safety, emergency management, enterprise risk management and reputation management.
Awareity’s solutions are helping organizations across multiple industries - education, financial, government, healthcare and other critical industries – to achieve better results by ensuring lessons learned become lessons implemented and the right information is shared with the right people in the right place at the right time with accountability and auditability at the individual-level. Awareity's solutions simplify complex challenges, reduce current and ongoing costs and improve efficiencies as obligations continue to mount and budgets and resources are limited.
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www.awareity.com
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