Online Privacy
“Privacy is not something that I'm merely entitled to, it's an absolute prerequisite.” - actor Marlon Brando
While I really like Facebook, you do have to be careful with the information you share and who you share it with. Some people I think go too far and lock down all information so all I have is a name and no clue if this person is my long lost friend from college or not. Other people publish everything about themselves to the world, their birthday, where they live, etc. That is too much sharing. I restrict that level of detail to just my “confirmed” friends. My public profile shows my workplace, my “town”, the colleges I attended, and a single photo carefully chosen.
Many websites (like games I play) ask for a birthday, so I’ve created a new one of January 1 with the year rounded down to the nearest decade. That won’t do on Facebook since friends want to celebrate my real birthday. So I entered a date that is near but slightly off. The town I list is the township I live in, not the smaller village jurisdiction.
Am I being paranoid? Perhaps not. There is a new company at http://www.spokeo.com/ that uses Facebook and other online data to build individual profiles. The amount of information they had on me was disturbing – my actual village, my house value, my age and birthday month, married, number of kids, etc. And this was the “free” display. If I paid I could have seen even more details (or so they claim).
Type in your name and see what comes up about yourself. If you have a common name, try [name], [city], [state].
Bottom Line
The good news is that Spokeo supports privacy requests. Go to www.spokeo.com/privacy and put in the URL of “your” page on their site. Then give them an email address (you could create a temporary email for this). Within seconds I had an email, clicked the response and immediately my name disappeared from their search results.
Labels: Crime, Fraud, ID Theft, Online Resources, Privacy
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