Torrent Emerges Containing Information of 100 Million Facebook Users

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In the day and age of social networking, there are those who are willing to go out there and exploit those networks. According to Fox News, over 100 Million Facebook users learned the hard way just
 how insecure their personal information is without the right privacy settings. The data that were scraped off of Facebook surfaced in the form of a 2.8 GB torrent on a torrent sharing site yesterday. The caveat to this? The data were all publicly available to anyone who found the profile.

Honestly, the information was publicly available by users who left their private information public. Is this an oversight on the part of Facebook? Not really. The users have the tools there to change their security and privacy settings, so there is no reason why it couldn't be done. As a longtime Facebook user, I feel that if I don't change my security settings, it's my own fault. There are a lot of people who will help the inexperienced user do this. Should Facebook look at it's default settings a little closer? Yes, it really should. Make the information private by default, allow the user to opt to make it public, rather than making them opt to have it private.

In the long run, it's not going to impact Facebook's bottom line, nor will it bother many of the users. There was no big security breach, nothing illegal was done. Freely available, public information was gathered together and shared with others. This is no different than having your name, address and phone number in your local phone book. You can choose to be unlisted, just as I can choose to be listed. I'm sure my information is in there. At least parts of it, since I know I've left some public information out there.

Published by Margaret Kerr
Margaret is a stay at home wife looking to make the most of her writing ability. She has always enjoyed writing and decided that it was time to turn it into more than a hobby.  View profile
  
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You're right, JJ, but in the case of Facebook - data privacy is up to the user, not the site. You're only as safe as you privacy settings are, no matter where you go online.
This is exactly the problem with social networks today; they leave their users vulnerable by collecting way too much data. I found a new social network called SomethingCoolHappened.com that is supposedly safe guarding (based on their blog somethingcoolhappened.blogspot.com) their members by not asking for a lot of identifying information. In this day and age I think this may be the safest way for online interactions to take place.
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