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Subject: [IP] approve:sigmanu Facebook smackdown
Begin forwarded message: From: Thomas Leavitt <thomas@thomasleavitt.org> Date: May 5, 2007 2:42:20 AM EDT To: dave@farber.net Subject: Re: Facebook smackdown Dave,What's new here? You could play six degrees of Kevin Bacon with almost any venture capitalist, professional angel investor or tech company board member, and wind up with (probably multiple) connections to the military industrial complex. The suspect part of Facebook's TOS is standard boilerplate. Surely no one is naive enough to think these issues are unique to Facebook (or even social networking as a whole)? The trade off between privacy and functionality inherent in social networking is simply more visible - dating sites, any sort of site where more than cursory profile information is gathered has this same issue.
... and if anyone is naive enough to think that a change to Facebook's "privacy" policy would be anything more than cosmetic in terms of protection from the OIA/CIA, I have just three words for them: National Security Letter.
Not to mention the fact that a TOS can be revised at any time, and that an acquiring company is under no obligation to honor it.
Ultimately, the golden rule of online privacy is simple: if you want a piece of information to remain private, then don't share it online. Anywhere. With anyone. In any medium. Period.
The macro issue here is the potential for our government (or any other) to abuse their access to this information for repressive purposes, or, in the worst case, to simply round up people of a particular political persuasion and summarily execute them.
... and in reference to that, it seems that the information available in a social networking site about someone's political affiliations would be insignificant, in relation to the trail left online via other mechanisms... such as, say, postings to Dave Farber's IP list. :) The reality is that the Internet is the new town square, and if you've got even the slightest inclination to express a political opinion, in all likelihood, you're going to do it online, and leave a record that a repressive government would have no problem finding.
In point of fact, it would be interesting to do a study of a hundred random individuals picked out of the phone book, and find out how many of them have enough of a corpus of identifiable online postings to enable a reasonable guess as to their political affiliation - and then cross check that guess against voter registration records and direct inquiries. I'd bet the success rate for those folks where a reasonable guess could be made would be very high.
Regards, Thomas Leavitt From: David Farber <dave@farber.net> Subject: Facebook smackdown Date: Fri, 4 May 2007 10:45:26 -0400 Interesting Begin forwarded message: From: "Brock N. Meeks" <bmeeks@cox.net> Date: May 4, 2007 10:04:05 AM EDT To: dave@farber.net Subject: Facebook smackdown What do Facebook, the CIA and your magazine subscription list have in common? Maybe more than you think... http://www.albumoftheday.com/facebook/ Trust me, it's worth the look. -------------------------------------------
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