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Social Media Privacy - Does it Really Exist?

posted by Nick Cifuentes @ Tuesday, February 23, 2010 - 11:21 AM
I know where you are, I know where you could be, I know pretty much everything about you.

And I’m not even your friend – at least (REAL) friend. It’s no surprise that social networking allows me to know this about you. I can see what you just ate, because you tweeted it, what you just got for Christmas, because you put it on Facebook. And now I can even see where you are all the time, because you went ahead and checked-in on Foursquare, or you Google Buzz-ed a random thought, and oh yea, you forgot to shut off that geo-location feature that is set to be on automatically when you activate your Google Buzz account…doh!

Sure, these publicly announced check-ins, random personal thoughts, and location-sharing networks might get you a cool new pseudo badge and allow you to become the Mayor of your workplace or the supermarket next door, maybe even the Target down the street – but one key thought that revolves around all of this – I know what you are doing, I know where you are, I know pretty much everything about you.

Social Networks & Privacy?

Privacy seems to be the 800-pound gorilla in the room that everyone notices is a big problem, large enough to be spoken about daily, but we more or less undermine it and sweep it under the rug and think it will clean itself up later somehow – aka….someone else will deal with it… or even worse – maybe nobody cares?

In the past, we’ve gone through the trials and tribulations of privacy wars on Facebook, and after that battle, their new policy now allows for more individual control and openness at the same time. That battle has slowed, and has now turned into the discussions around the new dangers of location-sharing networks such as Foursquare, Google Buzz, Loopt, even Yelp’s new check-in feature, maybe even clever Twitter or Facebook searches will yield some good results as to where you might be. As each of us get caught up in the novelty and bonuses associated with our behavior – what dangerous doors are we opening by taking part in this?

This leads into a larger discussion around the privacy associated with social networks, but to be honest, if we are taking part in this phenomenon daily – do we care about privacy? Sure there are certain Facebook pictures you want to keep targeted to just a select group of friends, and on Twitter you want to grant permission to a select group of people to see your tweets; privacy exists – but what is privacy if we are taking part in social reality anyways?

The 24/7 personal openness we display as social media users ties to our inherent behavior to play to our strengths. Social media has changed the way we live on and offline and has us living in much more “open” environments, compared to our parents and other Generation X’ers who lived in “closed” worlds and had “separate” behaviors. Social reality now combines all of that for us!

All of this sharing allows people to play to their virtues, even more in a social media world. People find their triumphs in social media accomplishing and well deserved from a societal standpoint, as well as a boost in their own individual behavior (aka EGO). If I tweeted from the top of mountain and said “About to hang-glide from 4,000 feet in Peru, what a life!”, compared to “Watching ‘Charles in Charge’ reruns on Mondayz…”; clearly it’s cooler I am doing the first rather than latter, but social media, despite its privacy concerns, allows us to live that behavior and feel accomplished for letting the world know what WE are doing. Does it matter that it related to hang-gliding or watching mundane television – no… I am letting the world know because I feel that I need to, to maybe feel that accomplishment in society.

I am not going to break this down from a psychological level, but I am sure there is some reality to this opinion in how people perceive themselves and why they take part – not caring about the privacy concerns we always feel so bullied with. In a recent study from the Future of Privacy Forum, 42% of Internet users are concerned that websites are collecting too much information about them, but then again with Facebook recently overtaking Yahoo! for the #2 top spot on the entire Internet - I don't know if that reflects privacy as much of a concern anymore?




And as we go forward into the future, there is no doubt that Privacy will become more of an issue, especially as more and more individuals begin to feel violated, whether in an emotional online attack or a physical attacks, such as when video podcaster Israel Hyman was robbed after we tweeted that he was out of town, and the fact that studies have already been done to show how social networks are being used as tools to further provoke attacks on a person – in the next two years, privacy and further security will certainly come to a boiling point, it will be interesting to see what happens at that point.


What are your thoughts around privacy and social networking – does it really matter and is there anything we can do about it?

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Mark Parker said...

Nick,
You’re right about the 800-pound gorilla. This is a topic that must take front and centre stage.

But how?

The CEO of Facebook says privacy is dead, get over it

This week we learn that banks are using companies like Rapleaf to spy on customers and build highly intrusive social profiles of their customers.

Personally, I think what we’re seeing is simply a free for all based on the loose free love behaviour of the early adopters before mainstream enters the play and ideals about privacy move back to a better, more sensible norm. I hope…

February 24, 2010 at 2:23 AM  

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