Beware what you disclose in public

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This study of facebook users 'likes' tells researchers far more than the disclosers intended. Be very careful what you place in the public domain.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/mar/11/facebook-us...

Comments

Interesting...

Of course, Facebook Likes and Google +1s are unambiguously public domain (especially as those social media buttons are found on many websites).

What's new is their software being able to make apparently accurate predictions on people's traits by analysing them - and the correlations don't always seem obvious. For example, I'm sure there must be millions of heterosexual males who like Wicked the Musical and support human rights / anti-hate campaigns... not to mention women of various sexualities...

Also, while currently such data mining is primarily used to service advertisements, it's likely such analyses could eventually prove lucrative for companies to sell onto others in individual (rather than aggregated) format. Especially as social networks are increasingly musing over the possibility of more aggressively enforcing their real names policies.

Of course, data mining isn't just restricted to online use - if you shop at a store with a loyalty card scheme, they'll know exactly what you buy and when; your bank knows who your employer is, how much they pay you, and both where and when you spend your money, your ISP knows exactly which websites you visit and when; while in both the US and UK, if government agencies suspect you're up to no good, they can request access to any / all of that information while prohibiting you from knowing they've done so.


As the right side of the brain controls the left side of the body, then only left-handers are in their right mind!

Geeze...!

Ole Ulfson's picture

That's Downright scarey! I'm glad I haven't been on my page for months...

Ole

We are each exactly as God made us. God does not make mistakes!

Gender rights are the new civil rights!

Loyalty Cards

I got tempted by one, many years ago, at a chain store I frequented, but the application wanted my Social Security Number. I said 'no', they said 'Can't take it without the SSN', I said, 'fine, give me the application back, I'm destroying it.' And no card for Ellen. I rarely shop there any more, either.
I'd guess they "took in" the SSN's of everyone that got a card. As well as full name, current address, etc etc.

Just imagine what could be done with that.

Ellen, 22nd level Necromancer of Threads

Good for me? Even though

Good for me? Even though I'm in IT, I don't have a myspace or facebook account, I have a minimalist LinkedIn profile (business oriented), and my livejournal hasn't been updated in three years...


I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.

Well, duh...

We have all taken personality inventories in school, not to mention the web quizzes that determine the color of your aura or your good/evil/lawful/chaotic orientation or whatnot.

The genuine personality inventories of various types were designed by people with training in psychology and sociology. They come up with a few dozen questions and draw some conclusions based on a single test.

Just imagine what conclusions can be drawn from thousands of questions (do you like this? y/n)

Big business is interested in your buying habits so that they can target advertising. The various governments may be more interested in your political views and the probability that you will do something that they don't like.

I know that I'm on several lists. Businesses know that I like technology and science. The guv'mint knows that I am a veteran and proud of it. I am probably on some gay lists, too, based on the fact that I am all for civil rights for everyone, and the group that is currently fighting for their rights is the LGBT folks. The fact that I'm getting ads for the WWW bear network, or something like that, bears it out. [snicker]

Yeah, they got that one wrong. Sorry, folks, but I'm not attracted to guys. You're wasting your advertising money.

Except that they really aren't. When you advertise, you expect that the vast majority of the people who see your ads will have no interest. If you only manage to cut out half of the targets that aren't interested, you have still saved lots of money.

By the way, it's not just FB and G+. They are able to identify you (your computer, actually) individually. Someone set up a site that tests for that, and I tried it with three or four different browsers, and all came back with the same answer.

I didn't try it using other access points or do anything really scientific like that, but that's not the point. If they can get even a quarter of your browsing history, they can infer a lot from that data.

The good thing is that you're unique, just like everyone else. [snicker] Sure, we're all on lots of lists, but so are billions of other people. If someone wants to target you individually, it can be done -- just like it can be done with any other of the billions of internet users.

If you stand out, you may be targeted. For instance, if you're a former general and the director of the CIA, someone may sort through your emails and find letters that you sent to your mistress.

If you have a security clearance, be very careful. You are a potential target for blackmail. Someone may ask for some minor favors in return for not telling your family that you like to read TS fiction.

There are ways to browse anonymously, if you want to bother. Using the TOR network works well. If you want to be even more paranoid, burn a TAILS disk and boot from it any time you want to browse. It leaves no traces on your computer, and the web sites that you browse can't trace you via your IP address.

Avoiding the GBLT folk.

I unapologetically live a life in stealth and am actually very puritanistic in the eyes of some folk. Someone in the local GBLT organization has taken offense by my excercising my freedom to not support them. Some of the things they get up to are just mean and vile.

The conservatives are not your only potiential enemies. Some of the diversity crowd get offended if you are not diverse enough.

Gwendolyn

That's why I

am not a fan of such public domains. A hacker can steal any personal data and use it. Why security systems are needed.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

That's why I [...] am not a

That's why I [...] am not a fan of such public domains. A hacker can steal any personal data and use it. Why security systems are needed.

Stanman, it's not the individual hackers that are the major concern. It's the businesses, the governments, and worst of all the interlocking sharing-of-data that they do.
A criminal is interested in your money and your property (identity, zombifying your computer to act as a spam spewer, whatever). That's all. The combination of business and government wants everything, and the ramifications could extend to your entire life, such as employment, health care and health insurance, rental or house loans, car insurance, and whether you will be investigated for certain crimes (whether or not you have committed any).
Furthermore, whatever they find NOW, will be saved forever-and-ever, and then if someone gets into power who, say, doesn't like people with gray beards and blue caps {ahem}, there's your info to prove that you USED to have one and maybe you should be punished...
And 'power' isn't necessarily governmental. What if your home loan director had an ex-husband with a beard like that and he was financially irresponsible and THEREFORE all people with beards like that are discriminated against? Fat chance figuring that out, much less winning a court case; but if you've lost your home because of it...

Ellen, 22nd level Necromancer of Threads