{"id":892,"date":"2003-10-30T19:37:48","date_gmt":"2003-10-30T19:37:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ubuntu.my\/wp30\/archives\/2003\/10\/30\/privacy_friendster.html"},"modified":"2003-10-30T19:37:48","modified_gmt":"2003-10-30T19:37:48","slug":"privacy_friendster","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/archives\/2003\/10\/30\/privacy_friendster.html","title":{"rendered":"privacy &#038; friendster"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"http:\/\/online.wsj.com\/public\/us\">The Wall Street Journal<\/a> published an article today entitled &#8220;Having Lots of Online Friends Could Mean Privacy Trouble.&#8221;  The article articulates some of the institutional privacy concerns that some users <i>do<\/i> have and suggests that more users <i>should<\/i> have.<\/p>\n<p>Now, i do believe in privacy concerns and i&#8217;m genuinely worried about institutional misuses of private data, but i&#8217;m not the average consumers.  As we all know, consumers will happily sell their privacy.  They don&#8217;t understand the implications of this.  And thus, there&#8217;s no incentive for corporations to not try to collect it and make money off of it.  This is where the government <i>should<\/i> step in.  But since the government is controlled by corporations&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p>Anyhow, i won&#8217;t follow that rant.<\/p>\n<p>The big thing to realize is that most consumers are far more concerned with local privacy, or intimacy concerns. They&#8217;re worried about their friends taking their information out of context, about their mom seeing something intended for their friends, of a future boss seeing a drunken picture.  Consumers are far more concerned with those who have limited local authority over them than institutional authority.  [Yes, here&#8217;s an opportunity for a study&#8230;]<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><br \/>\n> Having Lots of Online Friends<br \/>\n> Could Mean Privacy Trouble<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> By JENNIFER SARANOW<br \/>\n> THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ONLINE<br \/>\n><br \/>\n><br \/>\n> More friends could mean less privacy.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> When Meredith Rosenblum first joined social networking site Friendster in<br \/>\n> July, she tried to find as many of her friends as she could. Now with 48<br \/>\n> immediate friends and more than half a million in her &#8220;network,&#8221; the<br \/>\n> 27-year-old advertising writer from San Francisco thinks she may have too<br \/>\n> many pals.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Two months ago, an online suitor she wasn&#8217;t interested in, and had told<br \/>\n> so, entered her e-mail address in Friendster, found her and sent her a<br \/>\n> note: &#8220;Ha, ha. I found you.&#8221; Turns out they were connected by one friend<br \/>\n> &#8212; and though the mutual friend vouches for the guy, Ms. Rosenblum found<br \/>\n> the whole experience creepy.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> &#8220;When you first sign up you are so sucked into finding your friends, you<br \/>\n> don&#8217;t realize how much access people have to finding you,&#8221; she says. (She<br \/>\n> still occasionally uses the site.)<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Online social-networking services such as Friendster (www.friendster.com<br \/>\n> <www.friendster.com> ) and Emode&#8217;s Tickle (connect.emode.com) make it easy<br \/>\n> for people to extend their circle of friends and contacts, but privacy<br \/>\n> experts caution that the services make it easier than ever for strangers<br \/>\n> to find out who people associate with. While much personal information is<br \/>\n> available on the Web, lists of friends generally aren&#8217;t. Amid these<br \/>\n> concerns, some networking sites have started adding tools to protect<br \/>\n> users&#8217; privacy.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> &#8220;We want to give the user control over all their information,&#8221; says James<br \/>\n> Currier, chief executive of Emode Inc., which recently launched the Tickle<br \/>\n> networking site.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Dating and other online services often encourage the user to divulge<br \/>\n> personal information and tastes. But what has privacy experts worried<br \/>\n> about networking sites is that they create visible maps of social networks<br \/>\n> for tens of thousands of people to view.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> &#8220;It&#8217;s your extended social network out there, up for grabs in a more<br \/>\n> visible, concentrated way than it normally is in the fabric of every day<br \/>\n> life,&#8221; says Lee Tien, a senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier<br \/>\n> Foundation in San Francisco. &#8220;These sites present a very rich source of<br \/>\n> association data, which is one of those things the civil-liberties world<br \/>\n> considers to be very important.&#8221;<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Users join sites such as Friendster by creating a profile of their<br \/>\n> interests and goals and then invite friends or business associates to be<br \/>\n> part of networking communities. Users can click through their friends&#8217;<br \/>\n> profiles, then on those of their friends&#8217; friends and so on &#8212; to various<br \/>\n> degrees of separation. Some, like Friendster, limit searching at four<br \/>\n> degrees while others, such as Tickle, are accessible to anyone signed up.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Betsy Burton, who works in public relations in New York, has been a member<br \/>\n> of Friendster since June. &#8220;I just feel like you wouldn&#8217;t join a site like<br \/>\n> Friendster if you were concerned about any kind of secrecy,&#8221; she says. &#8220;I<br \/>\n> think it&#8217;s a choice.&#8221; Still, Ms. Burton, 25, says she knows &#8220;a lot of<br \/>\n> people who got really into it and then totally freaked out,&#8221; feeling like<br \/>\n> people were keeping track of their friend counts.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Ms. Burton views the site as a fun place to click around every few days<br \/>\n> when she has free time at work, taking a peek at people&#8217;s friends and<br \/>\n> interests. &#8220;I think it&#8217;s fascinating to look at people&#8217;s social circles,&#8221;<br \/>\n> she says. &#8220;It&#8217;s like a social climber&#8217;s dream.&#8221;<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Meanwhile, other users say they do have some concerns and have figured out<br \/>\n> their own methods of retaining an element of privacy. Marc Magnelia, a<br \/>\n> health-care consultant in Berkeley, Calif., joined Friendster six months<br \/>\n> ago. Concerned that so many people would be able to view his profile and<br \/>\n> potentially track him down in person, Mr. Magnelia, 35, purposely didn&#8217;t<br \/>\n> include his location or details about his job, and wrote vague or<br \/>\n> imaginary interests (For example, Botox and competitive eating).<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> &#8220;There are millions of people out there potentially and I didn&#8217;t think<br \/>\n> [the information] was important enough to be put there when you weigh it<br \/>\n> against the potential for abuse,&#8221; Mr. Magnelia says. Ms. Rosenblum, for<br \/>\n> her part, recommends creating a special e-mail address only for the<br \/>\n> networking site.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Most sites specify in their privacy policies that they won&#8217;t give away<br \/>\n> personal information unless required by law, but legal requirements can<br \/>\n> span from subpoenas from law enforcement to subpoenas in civil cases such<br \/>\n> as divorce proceedings and insurance, corporate and bank investigations.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Users of networking sites, as they do with dating sites or instant<br \/>\n> messenger services, use pseudonyms or truncated names, providing a good<br \/>\n> degree of public anonymity. But subpoenas can ask a service to turn over<br \/>\n> identifying information, such as full name and contact information, as<br \/>\n> well as communications within the site.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> &#8220;I think there are good questions to ask regarding whether individuals<br \/>\n> understand first of all that law enforcement could gain access to the data<br \/>\n> and use it to identify suspects or people with similar ideologies, and<br \/>\n> that access could occur through the sites&#8217; consent,&#8221; says Chris Hoofnagle,<br \/>\n> associate director at the Electronic Privacy Information Center in<br \/>\n> Washington.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> The Federal Bureau of Investigation hasn&#8217;t made use of social networking<br \/>\n> sites, according to spokesman Paul Bresson. He didn&#8217;t want to comment on<br \/>\n> hypothetical situations, but said the Internet is another tool to help<br \/>\n> investigations, and noted that the FBI still uses old-fashioned<br \/>\n> communication mechanisms such as telephone records.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> But online lists of friends have been used by law enforcement. America<br \/>\n> Online spokesman Andrew Weinstein says buddy lists have been provided in<br \/>\n> law-enforcement investigations.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Beyond possible legal access to online social networks, privacy experts<br \/>\n> say just the fact that so many people, including potential stalkers and<br \/>\n> criminals, can see the networks online raises concerns. In addition,<br \/>\n> people may unknowingly end up revealing information such as their sexual<br \/>\n> orientation to people they never intended to because those people are<br \/>\n> somehow in the same network.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Aware of such concerns, many networking sites say they have started<br \/>\n> implementing new privacy tools. Three months ago Ryze.com, a networking<br \/>\n> site with 60,000 members, gave users the option of three levels of<br \/>\n> privacy: High, Medium or Low. High privacy consists of letting only people<br \/>\n> within two friends or members of &#8220;networks&#8221; (interest groups) contact and<br \/>\n> within four view, while medium means within four friends or members of<br \/>\n> networks and low, everyone on the site.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> &#8220;We know that people have different concerns in this area and some people<br \/>\n> are trying to promote themselves and their business to the world, but<br \/>\n> other people just want to keep in touch with small group of people,&#8221; says<br \/>\n> Adrian Scott, Ryze.com founder, who adds soon there will be networks that<br \/>\n> aren&#8217;t publicly visible on the site at all.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Meanwhile, Emode&#8217;s Mr. Currier says right now users can control who sees<br \/>\n> their data according to degrees, but eventually the company plans to let<br \/>\n> users control who sees what data, person by person.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> A spokesman for Friendster Inc., of Sunnyvale, Calif., said there were no<br \/>\n> privacy issues on Friendster, and that the company couldn&#8217;t comment on<br \/>\n> future features. Currently, users can only view profiles that are<br \/>\n> connected to them by within four degrees of friends. Users aren&#8217;t required<br \/>\n> to post photographs to sign up, and are only required to have a valid<br \/>\n> e-mail address. Users can also choose how much or little information to<br \/>\n> include in their profile.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> To be sure, association maps aren&#8217;t the only privacy concerns network<br \/>\n> sites pose. They also collect loads of data just like many other sites on<br \/>\n> the Web, raising the question of what they do with it. For now, most<br \/>\n> sites&#8217; privacy policies say they don&#8217;t sell data entered in the site but<br \/>\n> may use it in an anonymous aggregate form to inform advertisers.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Still, privacy experts say an important point to keep in mind, especially<br \/>\n> since most of these sites are free right now, is that privacy policies can<br \/>\n> change, for example, when a company changes its business model, is bought<br \/>\n> by another entity or files for bankruptcy. &#8220;Free services sometimes evolve<br \/>\n> into very marketing-driven services,&#8221; says Stephen Keating, executive<br \/>\n> director of the Privacy Foundation in Denver.<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Write to Jennifer Saranow at jennifer.saranow@wsj.com<br \/>\n><br \/>\n> Updated October 30, 2003<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Wall Street Journal published an article today entitled &#8220;Having Lots of Online Friends Could Mean Privacy Trouble.&#8221; The article articulates some of the institutional privacy concerns that some users do have and suggests that more users should have. Now, i do believe in privacy concerns and i&#8217;m genuinely worried about institutional misuses of private [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_s2mail":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-892","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-friendster"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/892","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=892"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/892\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=892"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=892"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zephoria.org\/thoughts\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=892"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}