Mark Zuckerberg Open Letter

December 2, 2009

It has been a great year for making the world more open and connected. Thanks to your help, more than 350 million people around the world are using Facebook to share their lives online.

To make this possible, we have focused on giving you the tools you need to share and control your information. Starting with the very first version of Facebook five years ago, we’ve built tools that help you control what you share with which individuals and groups of people. Our work to improve privacy continues today.

Facebook’s current privacy model revolves around “networks” — communities for your school, your company or your region. This worked well when Facebook was mostly used by students, since it made sense that a student might want to share content with their fellow students.

Over time people also asked us to add networks for companies and regions as well. Today we even have networks for some entire countries, like India and China.

However, as Facebook has grown, some of these regional networks now have millions of members and we’ve concluded that this is no longer the best way for you to control your privacy. Almost 50 percent of all Facebook users are members of regional networks, so this is an important issue for us. If we can build a better system, then more than 100 million people will have even more control of their information.

The plan we’ve come up with is to remove regional networks completely and create a simpler model for privacy control where you can set content to be available to only your friends, friends of your friends, or everyone.

We’re adding something that many of you have asked for — the ability to control who sees each individual piece of content you create or upload. In addition, we’ll also be fulfilling a request made by many of you to make the privacy settings page simpler by combining some settings. If you want to read more about this, we began discussing this plan back in July.

Since this update will remove regional networks and create some new settings, in the next couple of weeks we’ll ask you to review and update your privacy settings. You’ll see a message that will explain the changes and take you to a page where you can update your settings. When you’re finished, we’ll show you a confirmation page so you can make sure you chose the right settings for you. As always, once you’re done you’ll still be able to change your settings whenever you want.

We’ve worked hard to build controls that we think will be better for you, but we also understand that everyone’s needs are different. We’ll suggest settings for you based on your current level of privacy, but the best way for you to find the right settings is to read through all your options and customize them for yourself. I encourage you to do this and consider who you’re sharing with online.

Thanks for being a part of making Facebook what it is today, and for helping to make the world more open and connected.

Mark Zuckerberg


Converting Brain to Memory

September 29, 2009

If you think healthcare reform is spooky wait until you read this:  Microsoft researcher converts his brain into ‘e-memory’.

Creative Commons

Creative Commons

So, this guy (Gordon Bell) digitally archives his life.  Not a journal, but digital pictures and videos of every receipt he receives, PDF’s of every website he visits, videos of his drive to work every day, and who knows what else.

Saving everything about ones life effectively undermines a person’s need to remember anything.  As we start to plow through the 21st century being ‘smart’ is less about what you know and more about your ability to effectively find information.  It leads me to wonder how much time he spends archiving his life (although he has assistance), and how long it takes him to find the information he has stored.  Searchability is a major factor when you consider that Bell has archived more than 350 gigabyles worth of his life.

Bell says that by 2020 our lives will be digitally archived and searchable.

I just hope Big Brother isn’t watching.


Twitter to Allow users to Tweet Location

August 21, 2009

In the rush of social media users heading towards complete disclosure Twitter will now allow users to share their location when they “Tweet”.

Image by Flickr user Shovelling Son.  CC-licensed

Image by Flickr user Shovelling Son. CC-licensed

Soon, when users post tweets of up to 140 characters they will be given the option of including the longitude and latitude.  This will be offered to developers first to allow them to create new applications for Twitter, and then eventually to all users.

Friends, I know big brother is watching, but I try to not to put too much out there.  I will be tweeting from my desk at home all the time; however I might use it if I go somewhere interesting.  I think this kind of technology is very interesting and also frightening.  Anything that can be used for good can also be used for bad.

I plan to watch this for a while before I jump in.


Big Brother is watching and somehow that's okay

April 9, 2009

I am a big fan of 1984, and A Brave New World.  I recognize that with the increase in live time social media that privacy is willfully being given up.  It is interesting to me to see how widespread this becomes:

I’ve engaged some of my professors using various social media resources, some of it positive, some of it not so much.   However, it allows me to view them as individuals, and not just teaching-drones.  There is a balance of how much information to publicly disseminate, and how much to hold on to. I’m still finding balance.  I likely will not be interested in any of the ideas presented below, at least for the moment.

http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/3705/professor-encourages-students-to-pass-notes-during-class-via-twitter

This link details a professor who is encouraging Graduate students, to use twitter during class to have a “back channel” of communication.  …The professor can see this, and somehow that’s okay.

————-

http://www.locaccino.org/

Allows people to track you down using the GPS in your phone.  I have not played with it yet, so I am unsure of its relative complexity.  But still, it allows people to track you down…and somehow that’s okay.

All of these things point to a new, less-private communication paradigm.  Personally, I’m waiting on holograms.


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