Electronic Frontier Foundation has a helpful article analyzing the changes, which FB is promoting as giving users more control over who has access to their data. While it's true that the new privacy settings interface is more convenient with respect to some kinds of information, FB is in fact eliminating many privacy options that used to be available. B.t.w., EFF recs that you NOT accept the privacy settings that FB recs.
More here.
(Pretty much all I post on FB is warnings about FB.)
UPDATE: Great NYT article here walks you through the settings to do what little you can to try to protect your privacy under the new FB regime.
December 13, 2009
Facebook's New Privacy Options
Cindy Sheehan: Camp OUT NOW
Sheehan has announced that on March 13 (which I'm told is the anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq), she will found a new camp across the street from the White House, on the lawn of the Washington Monument. The camp will have two purposes: to protest the U.S. wars in Iraq and A-stan, and to serve as a community for those who have lost jobs and homes during what she terms "the Goldman Sachs Depression." More at PeaceoftheAction.
New Arcade Experience: "Whack-A-Banker"
Little bankers pop up out of the holes. The game has proved so popular that the owner keeps having to replace worn-out mallets. More at the BBC.
December 10, 2009
Star Trek Overdub by Dayjoborchestra
DJO bills her/himself as "makers of the world's finest styrofoam nuns for over 68 thousand years."
December 8, 2009
W5RAn,
"broadcasting collaborative content, every hour on the hour", as I understand lets anyone upload anything in the following categories: art and design, decor, life sciences, photography, things, wear, words. At right, a sample of the current results under words (click on the image for a more legible version, or seek the original material here). (Thanks, Danny!)
December 6, 2009
Google Now Tracking Logged Out Users
I understand that, until recently, it's been at least theoretically possible to use Google yet prevent the company from tracking all your online activities by logging out of your Google account.
Don't forget to do that. Via Tech Radar (thanks, Ben!)
Not any more.
As of last Friday, even searchers who aren’t logged into Google in any way have their data tracked in the name of providing a ‘better service’.
* * * * *
The company explained: “What we’re doing today is expanding Personalized Search so that we can provide it to signed-out users as well. This addition enables us to customise search results for you based upon 180 days of search activity linked to an anonymous cookie in your browser.”
However, if you’ve previously been a fan of the log-out method to avoid being tracked, there’s still the option to disable the cookie by clicking a link at the top right of a search results page.
December 4, 2009
IMHO, much of DU has been more or less hopelessly compromised by trolls,
but there are still a few worthy threads. E.g.:
44. and if we could have had Medicare for all.....
Look at all the real jobs that could come from THAT trickle down effect.
32. any jobs caulking foreclosed houses?
33. Chains You Can Believe In
36. Funds don't seem limited for war or Wall Street bailouts. Do they?
"You said that we did it for a show."
39. Hilarious. DU is a riot.
Where's all that Obama love that was flowing before the election? People didn't really believe he was on the side of the working men/women, did they?
This is rich. I'll have to start visiting DU more often now.
42. I'll clue you in: Expect some posters to agree with Obama & that unemployment is a handout.
46. Wow.....that almost sounds like someone's channelling Reagan nt
48. When you have been mocked at DU for a peace sign avatar, anything can happen
55. Some people were so caught up in those pretty speechsermons he preached
that nothing on earth would convince them that he wasn't a progressive dream, not his appointment of the likes of Goolsbee to his economic team, not his duplicity on NAFTA, not the blatant catering to haters in the McClurkin Fiasco, nothing.
So here we are.
43. I love how he's the decider when it comes to shipping dollars overseas
but when it comes to jobs, we're supposed to host little meetings in our living rooms and solve those problems ourselves.
Of course the real solution is obvious, but we're not supposed to notice.