Even after nearly a decade of modern social networking, we're still having trouble grappling with privacy. We're not talking about when some server is compromised and your password ends up for sale in the seedier parts of the internet ? no, this is about our own management of our own privacy.
What are we supposed to be posting on Facebook and Twitter and Google+? What shouldn't we be posting? Can we depend on the privacy features these social networks offer, or should we just assume that if we post it online behind supposedly closed doors that it's not necessarily going to stay behind those closed doors? And once it's online, is it yours anymore anyway?
Do our employers have the right to see what we're posting online? Should they care? And how are we supposed to teach our children how to properly and safely use social networking when we're clearly failing at doing so ourselves?
Social networking can be awesome, and it can be dangerous. Just how are we supposed to manage our own social privacy?
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/g2HuOQImiE0/story01.htm
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