Facebook privacy
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
What you need to know about your child's Facebook account
In the ever-growing world of social media sites, Facebook is king.
It went from an exclusive network that opened at about a dozen
college in the early part of the decade to the sixth-most
trafficked site in the world. It has more than 350 million active
users, which means that if Facebook were a country, it would be the
world's fourth-largest.
Chances are, your child is on it. Maybe you are, too. (So are
we.)
But late last year, Facebook made some changes to its privacy
policy and the tools that allow users to control who can see their
information. If you haven't checked over your child's profile in a
few months, you may want to do so now, and here's what you need to
know to keep your child safe online.
They can seem confusing, but the changes actually reflect a desire
to clean up some of the hodge-podge privacy tweaks that Facebook
has made over the past few years. You now have the same ?? choices
when deciding who can see information about you: share it with
everyone on the Internet, Facebook friends and networks, friends of
friends, only friends or a customized group. The last is a
particularly useful option
1. Visible information. Part of Facebook's draw is
convenience: When you log in, you immediately get a "news feed"
showing all your friend's recent activities. Pictures from their
family vacation, changes in relationship status (they went from
being "in a relationship" to "it's complicated" -- uh oh!), and
their new favorite band, all in tiny nuggets of information on your
home page.
You can keep your information from being shown in other people's
news feeds by adjusting your privacy settings. But in December, the
default setting for who can view your information became
"Everyone." That includes everyone on Facebook and, depending on
your other settings, anyone who searches for you in search engines
like Google.
HOW TO FIX IT: You now have to manually select who can see your
profile updates and activities. Go under Settings, then click
Privacy.
2. Tagging. One of the longest-standing complaints
about the tagging feature is that the person who originally
uploaded the photos has the power to tag anyone they want. If your
child is tagged, he or she can "untag" themselves, but that feature
only works until the person who owns the photos decides to "retag"
them. This means
HOW TO FIX IT: Go to Settings, then Privacy, then Profile, the
"Photos of Me." You can make all photos and videos in which your
child is tagged visible to certain groups -- friends, friends of
friends, only you, etc. But remember -- the default is now
everyone, so make sure you do this manually. (Teaching moment
alert! This fixes the tag, but does not delete the photo; only the
person who uploaded it can do that. This is a good opportunity to
explain to your child that while he may have thought the picture of
him DOING X was funny, a potential college or job employer down the
road might not.)
3. Search engine visibility
We live in the world of Google, which is getting better
and better at compiling all the tiny bits of information that exist
about each of us online.
FIX IT: Settings, Privacy, Search. Here you can adjust how your
child's name shows up in searches on both Facebook itself and in
search engines.
A few final thoughts: Visibility isn't necessarily a bad thing.
Companies and job seekers spend thousands of dollars to get
themselves on the first page of search engine results.
While the desire to shelter your child from the unknown and
potentially dangerous areas of the internet is certainly a good
one, remember that i. Think of the saying, "Teach a man to fish and
he eats for a lifetime." Think of this as the opposite of that: You
can shield your child from the Internet, but with the future
clearly online, it's better to teach them how to be safe there.





















