Trusting bottom feeding social network sites can be dangerous to your privacy
The Wall Street Journal reported today that Facebook, MySpace and several other social-networking sites have been sending data to advertising companies that could be used to find consumers' names and other personal details, despite promises they don't share such information without consent.
The practice, which most of the companies defended, sent user names or ID numbers tied to personal profiles being viewed when users clicked on ads. After questions were raised by The Wall Street Journal, Facebook and MySpace moved to make changes. By Thursday morning Facebook had rewritten some of the offending computer code.
The obvious solution
is to use more reputable and non-commerical sites, such as WeStrive.org, that exist to serve their community, not their advertisers.
Comments
Ron, thanks for the mention.
Ron, thanks for the mention. We're having a leadership council meeting now to discuss, in part, how we can capitalize on this discontentment. And noticing that being a non profit helps a lot in that we have a social mandate and not a profit mandate.