nanog mailing list archives

OT: Social Networking, Privacy and Control


From: Jay Ashworth <jra () baylink com>
Date: Tue, 4 Oct 2011 11:38:00 -0400 (EDT)

[ if you were already over this topic, plonk the thread ]

----- Original Message -----
From: "Bill.Pilloud" <bill.pilloud () gmail com>

Is this not the nature of social media? If you want to make sure something
is secure (sensitive information), Why is it on social media. If you are
worried about it being monetised, I think Google has already done that.

No.

Because "sensitive" is a word with different definitions at different times
for different people.

I don't mind my friends knowing that I (used to) go to Rocky Horror every
Saturday night and run around in my underwear.  I don't particularly want 
a potential employer to know that, and I might not want a new girlfriend to
know it *immediately*.

The promise of Social Networking is *precisely* that it permits this more
fine-grained *control* (that's the key word, for those who weren't playing 
the home game) over the information you disseminate, as opposed to just 
posting all of it on your blog.

*Telling people you're going to provide them that control* and then being
sloppy about it -- or worse, purposefully evil -- is the thing that has people
up in arms.

As usual, the underlying issue is one of trust.

Alas, I see no theoretical way that distributed systems like Diaspora *can*
provide some of the functions that are core to systems like Facebook, *exactly
by virtue* (vice?) of the fact that they are distributed; there is no central
Trust Broker.

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth                  Baylink                       jra () baylink com
Designer                     The Things I Think                       RFC 2100
Ashworth & Associates     http://baylink.pitas.com         2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA      http://photo.imageinc.us             +1 727 647 1274


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