Facebook: Still not your friend

38 thoughts on “Facebook: Still not your friend”

        1. Peeking, of course, earns you a Facebook cookie so they can follow you around. But I really can’t say much, since there’s a link to Facebook right there in my sidebar. 🙁

  1. I use Facebook all the time, too. It’s the best way for me to keep up with friends and family. Plus, I really do enjoy it. I find a lot of news, photos, and funnies on it all the time. The way I figure is that a couple years ago when i signed up, without knowing what all FB did, then they got all my info then. So what good does it do now. Also, I imagine that just being on the internet and having an IP and using Gmail also has me tracked with someone. So long as I don’t do anything wrong, I just deal with it. I don’t like it, but really don’t have much of a choice at this time. Well, I do… I can leave FB. But we’re still watched in other manners.

    1. The one thing, though, that I adamantly refrain from doing/using are the apps. No way. Absolutely not. I deny them all and will not use them. I don’t need them anyway… it’s not like I don’t have enough to keep myself busy on the internet all day and night anyway.

    2. I reached a similar conclusion in a previous post: Facebook already had everybody’s info a few years ago. The sanctions and audits came too late. I’ll probably go to my grave protesting intrusions and tracking by Facebook, Google, Yahoo, the TSA, the government, …

        1. Yep. The average IQ of those TSA agents must be about 80. Cretins, all of them — the agents and the agency and the lawmakers that enabled them. I swear I will not fly again unless there’s a death in the family (and if I still have a license I’ll consider driving instead).

        1. I couldn’t even find a setting to disallow links when I checked mine! Have you tried doing a test comment of your own with a link? You can always delete it later.

  2. Wow, I am really old school here. I signed up to FB only a couple of months ago and was confused about the privacy settings. I think I’ve got them right now, but I suspect my email address got “out there” because the spam on my email has suddenly exploded. I’m wondering whether to try to get a different address but my present one is embedded in so many places. FB has sure complicated my life and I use it very little. Nuts. 😥

    1. You know Jim, I think you may have just cracked the mystery of just why Facebook is such an enormous success: Damned near all the discomforts of actual “real world” social-interaction without ever having to leave your home! 🙄

    2. I found it crazy complicated to set up all the privacy settings (and everything else) and of course that left me wondering what I’d left wide open. And regardless of the settings, FB can see everything and sells or gives our info to its many, many partners.

  3. I had a FB page along with my personal one for awhile but gave them both the heave-ho, then emptied my cache and cookies, etc. Waaay too much information sharing for me to be comfortable. Email is good enough. If the family doesn’t use that, or the telephone, they’re out of luck with me. 🙂 All that said, there are plenty in the writing world who insist we must have FB…Twitter…LinkedIn…and so forth to market ourselves. I don’t know about you but I really detest this approach, for more than one reason. I’m fated for oblivion evidently except for my little spot in WordPress. Am I upset about that? Noooo…. 😉

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