Is It Time To Stop Using Social Media? (counterpunch.org) 291
Slashdot reader Nicola Hahn writes: Bulk data collection isn't the work of a couple of bad apples. Corporate social media is largely predicated on stockpiling and mining user information. As Zuckerberg explained to lawmakers, it's their business model...
While Zuckerberg has offered public apologias, spurring genuine regulation will probably be left to the public. Having said that, confronting an economic sector which makes up one of the country's largest political lobbying blocks might not be a tenable path in the short term.
The best immediate option for netizens may be to opt out of social media entirely.
The original submission links to this call-to-action from Counterpunch: Take personal responsibility for your own social life. Go back to engaging flesh and blood people without tech companies serving as an intermediary. Eschew the narcissistic impulse to broadcast the excruciating minutiae of your life to the world. Refuse to accept the mandate that you must participate in social media in order to participate in society. Reclaim your autonomy.
While Zuckerberg has offered public apologias, spurring genuine regulation will probably be left to the public. Having said that, confronting an economic sector which makes up one of the country's largest political lobbying blocks might not be a tenable path in the short term.
The best immediate option for netizens may be to opt out of social media entirely.
The original submission links to this call-to-action from Counterpunch: Take personal responsibility for your own social life. Go back to engaging flesh and blood people without tech companies serving as an intermediary. Eschew the narcissistic impulse to broadcast the excruciating minutiae of your life to the world. Refuse to accept the mandate that you must participate in social media in order to participate in society. Reclaim your autonomy.
It's time to user smaller specific social media (Score:5, Interesting)
We should not have more than 10% of the population on any given social media platform.
I haven't used facebook for almost a decade. I saw it was a bad actor from the beginning.
But Google is just as bad but not as obvious as is any other social media.
You are the product.
But part of their power depends on having most people on their platform. If they can't get more than a fraction of people on their platform, then they cannot build comprehensive profiles.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:It's time to user smaller specific social media (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
So what? the costs get passed on anyway, if it is more expensive to gather then it just becomes a more valuable commodity.
For it to have value then it must have importance, worth, or usefulness of something. Not just be expensive. Fragmenting social network sites could put up the aggregation cost, then perhaps the data becomes less useful and more complex to merge. Given the current state of things I'm willing to try something different.
On the other hand, would you pay 10GBP more for an item where the social media data mining activity cost has been merged into the shelf price? I'd go for the one where I'm not paying that tax,
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
"I'm a narcissist that isn't getting rewarded on social media by people telling me how great I am, so now I'm telling people that I stopped using it. Aren't I unique, quirky, and a total edge Lord?
I'm so young and counter culture it hurts"
Yeah, great, you play in the sand box kid
Your comment reflects the total hostility that is exhibited on all sides of any topic on most forums these days.
Not knowing a single fact about the poster you fling poo like a caged monkey, while insinuating the worst motives about your target anonymously. YOU are what is wrong with trying to hold intelligent discussions on most comment forums today.
Re: (Score:3)
hawk2
hôk/
verb
gerund or present participle: hawking
carry around and offer (goods) for sale, typically advertising them by shouting.
"street traders were hawking costume jewelry"
synonyms: peddle, sell, tout, vend, trade in, traffic in, push
"hawking his wares on the street"
I believe I'll just take my seat, now.
Re:It's time to user smaller specific social media (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it's time to boycott all those silos you call "platforms" and go back to open protocols. Everybody should physically own their data (including encrypted cloud storage, as long as the key never leaves the client) and connect with each other over a secure open protocol.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:It's time to user smaller specific social media (Score:5, Interesting)
Would not work.
If I organize an Aikido seminar with a famous teacher I expect about 100 - 120 guests.
For that I have my FB account and simply post into my timeline the event details or organize an "FB Event" , where people can click "join", "maybe", "no".
To reach all my audience I would need to do that on every majour platform. And hence: I would be on all majour platforms. Sooner or later people would migrate to the more prominent one(s).
E.g. classmates from school gather on platform A ;D
Ex military on platform B
Family on Platform C, except for your spoces parents who refuse
And so it goes on. In the end everyone is on several platforms. I'm on several platforms anyway, because I don't use FB for business, but linkedin and XING.
It is the same with messaging Apps ... I use 4 regularly and have probably 4 more installed (and that does not include FB messenger ... I only use it if I need to sent a reply, but that I usually do via the web site)
Re:It's time to user smaller specific social media (Score:4, Interesting)
To reach all my audience I would need to do that on every majour platform.
It is the same with messaging Apps
That's because these platforms are deliberately non-interoperable in an attempt to build their own market share. If the idealists in this thread got their way and people just said no, then we'd end up with a system more like email. My gmail account can email any other email account, no problem. Why can't messengers/calendars do the same? No technical reason.
Re: (Score:2)
Not at all.
What you are describing is competition in a vertical market.
Re: (Score:2)
We should not have more than 10% of the population on any given social media platform.
It defeats the purpose of a social media platform, which is to connect people. I don't want a https://xkcd.com/1810/ [xkcd.com] situation where you need many accounts to get in touch. The alternative to platforms are decentralized protocols but only one gained traction: e-mail.
Re:It's time to user smaller specific social media (Score:5, Informative)
But Google is just as bad but not as obvious as is any other social media. You are the product.
I don't know what you mean by 'not as obvious', but no Google is not just as bad. And it just confuses the issue to insist that they are. The problem with Facebook isn't that they have your info - it's the way they use it. Including sharing it with 3rd parties, sharing stuff they told you only your friends could ever see, and allowing 3rd parties to target you directly based on the info they got from Facebook.
Google has your info and uses it to run their business. Which is plenty intrusive, but still consists of showing you advertisements that they think you'll click on. That's a devil's bargain that you might not like, but it's not what Facebook does - which is to use your info any damn way they can think of as well as selling it to others. It's possible to use Google's search service in incognito mode and not give them any personal info - and they can still make money off of you in that mode. Of course, once you sign on to Gmail, you're in the matrix. But at least it's possible. Facebook doesn't have the luxury of a business model that can exist without your info - but that doesn't mean they couldn't run a successful business without compromising it. They just choose not to.
Not stop - using own owned platforms (Score:4, Interesting)
Also one can stop sharing everything about your life.
For example I have Twitter which I mostly use only to read posts as new. I seldom post something myself.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
"For example I have Twitter which I mostly use only to read posts as new. I seldom post something myself."
Twitter here:
That is ok, just knowing what you do read and what you do not is enough for us to monetize your personal data.
Thanks for being a sheep,
Twitter Inc.
Re:Not stop - using own owned platforms (Score:5, Insightful)
"Twitter dos not know who I am for one"
It doesn't care what your name is. It knows that you're a right wing conspiracy theorist, a bit racism sprinkled over and so it knows which ads to serve you to influence your behavior in the voting booth.
Re: (Score:2)
It knows that you're a right wing conspiracy theorist
That's an interesting conspiracy theory you have there. Better put on the tinfoil hat to protect yourself.
Re: (Score:2)
This.
Also, we are not influenced by what we post, rather what we read.
Re: (Score:3)
Also one can stop sharing everything about your life.
Or just don't post stuff you want to keep private. My wife posts photos of our vacation to Facebook. Do I care if the whole world knows where I went on vacation? Nope, not at all. My daughter posts pictures of all our meals. Do I care? Nope, unless Trump starts rounding up all the vegans (we are mostly liberals).
The things I want to keep private (my heroin dealer's cell number, assassination list, KGB paystubs) don't go on Facebook.
I have never regretted anything I posted. Using social media is fine
Re: Not stop - using own owned platforms (Score:4, Insightful)
You went on vacation, so you weren't home, which is a great time to break in and steal stuff.
You posted pictures of your home,probably move in dates. The location is somewhere in your history.
Before social media so much knowledge was public, but hard to access. Now it is quick to access
Re: Not stop - using own owned platforms (Score:4, Informative)
You went on vacation, so you weren't home, which is a great time to break in and steal stuff.
The photos were posted after we returned. Anyway, if you want to find an unoccupied house, there is a far easier way: Knock on the door. If someone answers, apologize and say you had the wrong address. Otherwise, jimmy a window and load up your sack. Of course, you can't be sure that no one is home just because they didn't answer the door, but you can't be sure everyone in the house went on vacation either.
When we go on vacation, we lock up, recharge the security camera batteries, set all the motion sensor alarms, put bars in the windows, hide our valuables, and notify the neighbors. It would actually be the WORST time to rob us. A typical weekday while we are at work/school would be much better.
The location is somewhere in your history.
The location of my home was already public information long before social media existed. It is listed in the phone book (which is online), and is also listed on public documents at the Santa Clara County website, that anyone can access.
Re: (Score:2)
You went on vacation, so you weren't home, which is a great time to break in and steal stuff.
If you post the pictures when you get back, this is a non-issue.
You posted pictures of your home,probably move in dates. The location is somewhere in your history.
Unless the address is in their "history", because they posted it to Facebook, it's not part of the database.
Before social media so much knowledge was public, but hard to access. Now it is quick to access
You have no idea what you're on about. Anyone with a business license can get access to government databases on a for-fee basis. They used to call it MERLIN, I'm not sure if that's still the current system. You can't easily use it to look up SSNs, but if you have someone's SSN you can use it to find all kinds of other information. And it
Re: (Score:2)
Before social media so much knowledge was public, but hard to access. Now it is quick to access
The only 'quick access' information is the information that someone else decides to feed you. Ain't it great.
Re: (Score:2)
You went on vacation, so you weren't home, which is a great time to break in and steal stuff.
You posted pictures of your home,probably move in dates. The location is somewhere in your history.
Before social media so much knowledge was public, but hard to access. Now it is quick to access
Hard to access? Hardly. The paranoid crowd seems to think that scooting over to the local courthouse and accessing everything you were talking about is too too hard.
Even though that data is real, and unambiguous.
What is difficult is going through life incognito, even without a computer or social media.You might be able to minimize your footprint if you faked your death, moved to Idaho and lived in a compound, bartered for everything with only people you trusted, and avoided others completely.
Otherwis
Re: (Score:2)
Most people are smart enough to post pictures AFTER they are back from vacations. ... but they could probably easily figure who has it and ask him. ... so they could break in any time anyway.
And most burglers are: not on my friends list, and hence don't see my pictures.
And: 90% of the people on my friends list, don't have my home address
I'm basically only sleeping at home and spent most of my free time outside, unless it is a lazy weekend
Re: (Score:2)
DARPA LifeLog
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:3)
youPorn has a like button next to that funky butt lovin midget porn. They already have your dirty little secrets. Some websites only put a single tracking pixel on their page so FB and Google know everywhere you go. It's literally next to impossible for the average user to get away from it
Re: (Score:3)
Also one can stop sharing everything about your life.
Alternatively, start sharing things about your life which aren't exactly true. For example, I just landed a full-time job that pays $45,000 a year, and all I have to do is sit at this console and turn that key if we get the alert and the other guy turns his key at the same time.
Re: (Score:2)
Also one can stop sharing everything about your life.
Alternatively, start sharing things about your life which aren't exactly true. For example, I just landed a full-time job that pays $45,000 a year, and all I have to do is sit at this console and turn that key if we get the alert and the other guy turns his key at the same time.
This is actually not a bad idea. Making your data useless via screwing with it. Also much fun.
Wrong question; You shouldn't have used it at all. (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, it is never too late to realize your mistake in believing it was ever OK to give a soulless corporation access to your personal information, and thus also allow HR to look at all your party pics where you got drunk, and other things you really dont want your professional career life to know about-- but really, what ever made you guys think it was even a good idea to start with?
I remember when the very idea of using your real name online was a point and shame offense.
We need to get back to that kind of thing,
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Wrong question; You shouldn't have used it at (Score:2, Funny)
I remember when Bruce Perens freaked out that others made accounts spelled similar to his name, and they changed the page so UIDs became vgisible, so it beme a 'thing' to have a low UID.
Thanks, Bruce.
Re: (Score:2)
Well plaid, sur.
Re:Wrong question; You shouldn't have used it at a (Score:5, Interesting)
Before dedicated social networks we used mailing lists, Usenet and forums. They were great because you could meet interesting, like-minded people, and they didn't harvest your personal data.
These days it's harder to avoid social networks. They offer a lot of features that people want, like easy photo sharing and real-time chat built in. Sure, you can replicate it all, but try getting random non-techies to install an IRC client, or spell Diaspora.
Modern life has become reliant on those services. People are too busy, they aren't going to post everything to five different networks and your personal email address.
The only solution is an open protocol. Make Facebook a protocol, let people choose the platform and client that suits them the best.
Re: (Score:2)
Usenet was my favourite thing about the internet. I still use it but feel sad that hardly anyone else does.
Re:Wrong question; You shouldn't have used it at a (Score:4, Insightful)
Says who? I've never used those services in the first place.
The question is, why are you posting everything? Stop broadcasting your life online!
Go back to regular forums, there's still millions of them all over the place, targeting specific topics. If I visit a DIY arcade cabinets forum, the worst thing that can happen is that I see ads related to arcade hardware, which I might be interested in because I visit that kind of website.
Re: (Score:3)
I actually managed to convince most of my friends to move to WhatsApp as an alternative to Facebook. WA at least does end-to-end encryption and isn't a social network, so while not perfect it's a lot better.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
This is the problem. People think they need it now. The abuses possible are inherent in all present implementations. A federal injunction should be issued. If they want to save face. Perhaps they read slashdot? The sharing of all (or part) personal information online is a national security risk. period. fucking period.
But I beg to digress (facebook needs to die. shutdown.) We need to focus on the solution. Open source (free as in beer) software and hardware to the rescue.
Let's get to this, gentlemen.
Just ditch Facebook (Score:4, Interesting)
For f**ks sake, *Facebook* sold access to your messenger private MESSAGES to a company that markets that data worldwide. Using some hidden psuedo opted in by default consent.
It isn't some sort of endemic that spans every social media company. It's just Facebook that's constantly pushing the boundaries of what it can get away with.
"A Facebook spokesperson confirmed that the app, which was designed by Cambridge University researcher Aleksandr Kogan to collect data on Americans on behalf of Cambridge Analytica’s British counterpart SCL, requested access to user inboxes through the read_mailbox permission."
So your private messages were sold to Putin. It wasn't by accident, they weren't hacked, Cambridge Analytics requested access to the messages in your mailbox and Facebook sold them that access via an implemented API. And CA were not at all secret about their intentions, they toured the world offering up your Facebook data for sale.
Here's Aleksandr Kogan of Cambridge Analytics touting the data grab and the ability to use it to influence foreign elections to Putin's St Petersberg group:
http://money.cnn.com/2018/03/20/technology/aleksandr-kogan-video-facebook-cambridge-analytica/index.html
Ditch Facebook, delete your account, never ever log in again. If you use a site and it has a Facebook button on it, its a tracking system, ask them to remove it.
Re: (Score:2)
If you search my full name (which is unique due to mix of nationalities) you will only find my LinkedIn profile, ie my carefully curated professional profile and CV.
I do it the other way: my full name happens to match that of a well-known politician (Democrat), making any search on it lost among millions of irrelevant political references.
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly this. Use a pseudonym with associated email address for each website, isolate all your interests from each other.
Here, I am known as DontBeAMoran, an idiot that posts mostly stupid garbage and sometimes funny replies or comments. On another website I am known as DontBeARocketScientist since I work at NASA
Re: (Score:2)
Very sly there.
Re: (Score:2)
Everything else I do online is either anonymous or under a pseudonym I keep for that specific purpose. People only know me by the handles I choose, and only people I've met get to know my real name.
Don't underestimate the ability to link tracking cookies, like if you order something from an e-tailer under your real name because they need your shipping address and post to /. under your alias at the same time the IP address will be the same. Even pseudonyms are dangerous if they can be linked to other pseudonyms that aren't anonymous because most of us are too lazy to fully compartmentalize. For example my best friend has a fairly unique online nick that is also publicly linked to his real world identit
Off to a good start. (Score:3)
The best immediate option for netizens may be to opt out of social media entirely.
Posting that on /. Are you going to hit up Facebook and Twitter too, or should one of us do it?
[ RT to take back control. #OptOut ]
Re:Off to a good start. (Score:4, Insightful)
Posting that on /. Are you going to hit up Facebook and Twitter too, or should one of us do it?
Isn't Slashdot social media? You've got friends and foes, journal entries, notifications...
Re: (Score:2)
When the ideas of selling user data, tracking, and privacy is discussed it's obvious that we're talking about the major social media players and not a tech rag like Slashdot.
Another question (Score:2)
Is it time to stop posting dick pics to social media? /s
Social media can be valuable for people. It is not however an excuse to allow the harvesting of your personal data.
Re: (Score:2)
Let's review what happens when you remove the "harvesting", shall we?
Facebook is going to cost you $14.99/month, Twitter will be $9.99/month, Instagram will be $9.99/month, YouTube Basic will be $7.99/month, while YouTube Red will continue to be $9.99/month.
And you would still have no assurance that your data is not being harvested. You would be like the people who search with DuckDuckGo because it claims to be secure.
Where've Y'all Been? (Score:2)
https://www.vanityfair.com/new... [vanityfair.com]
I tried to post this nearly 6 months ago, but y'all weren't having any. Then.
Yes! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Stop completely? Not realistic (Score:2)
But it’s definitely time people started using it more wisely.
And I’d argue it may very well be time to stop using the truly evil entities like Facebook... of course having left it around 2014, I realize that’s easy for me to say but harder for existing users to do.
Re: (Score:2)
The user is the product. Every interaction is sold. Every word, image, voice is ad friendly.
Personal Responsibility? (Score:2)
Take personal responsibility for your own social life.
Social media doesn't take away any personal responsibility any more than the telephone or a newspaper advertisement did. Your social life still needs to be built on information whether you see an advert for an event on TV or on a poster glued to the side of a building, or get invited to a party through an SMS.
A lot of people fundamentally don't realise that a large part of social media doesn't offset meeting people in fleshy person, and actually provides even more opportunities to do just that.
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, they are working on that.
Me never have (Score:2)
As to the question, my initial take is yea! But maybe things are not that simple for others in their world.
Just my 2 cents
Nothing will change (Score:2)
Meet space, not Cyber space (Score:3)
While there is a place for electronic communication: emails, 'phone calls, on-line group messaging, what is far more satisfying is meeting people in the flesh to: chat, eat together, dance, go for walks, ... that is how true friendships are nurtured and grow. When you are with people you more easily learn their true nature [wikimedia.org]. We are a social species -- this need has been exploited by social media, with the unfilled promise that using it will make us more socially successful: whereas the result is often the opposite.
Re: (Score:3)
Indeed, tell me your Facebook name and I'll send you an event invite so we can meet.
Oh and if that wasn't snide enough just remember I'm currently in Italy, but meeting in real life is easy right so it should be just as easy to catch up in Milan for a coffee as it is to have this conversation right?
The world of social network is not as simple as the proponents of alternatives always make it out.
It's time for a new non-commercial service. (Score:4, Interesting)
We need to upgrade/replace email and Usenet.
I've said this time and time again: Facebook only exists because we're still using protocols and services from the steam age of computing. Usenet is super-dead and email is some awkward crutch.
Replace it with something from this day and age and Facebook will disappear all by itself because people will stop using it because it won't be the best solution around anymore.
It's that easy.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I also think you need a new service to go along with upgraded email/usenet: Identity management.
It's one of the things that Facebook and Google do that these other systems don't. Both provide some degree of single-sign-on for consumers, and allows you to link your activity online together into a coherent profile, showing your status and activity across multiple platforms. There needs to be a set of open industry standards that allow any number of allows your activity to be discoverable and verifiable if
User data collection powers the free internet (Score:5, Interesting)
The question we hear many times a day. Yet we expect that almost all websites will not charge us. Even though they have costs: depreciation, electricity, staff, buildings - that someone has to pay for.
So would the public be willing to hand over a credit card to use a website? Experience shows that almost nobody does, when compared with the billions of accesses per day that come from subscribers to "free" sites. And what happens to "privacy" then? We would just trade fears of all the lies we tell when we subscribe to a website being replaced with the far more serious fears of having our card details stolen, bought and sold.
Personally, I don't give a damn about who knows when my date of birth was, what I last bought from Amazon or whether I "liked" a particular posting or not. It seems to me that the only people who do worry, do so about how other people might be losing their privacy - not about their own. If it bothers you, then stop. If it doesn't then ignore all the media frenzy. Though since almost all the online sites that are carrying scare stories about mass data collection are doing exactly the same thing they criticise FB and social media in general, of doing.
Re: (Score:2)
Personally, I don't give a damn about who knows when my date of birth was, what I last bought from Amazon or whether I "liked" a particular posting or not. It seems to me that the only people who do worry, do so about how other people might be losing their privacy - not about their own.
So because you don't care about your privacy, nobody else does? I care very much about losing my privacy, and I give all kinds of damns about whether someone knows my birthdate, my purchases, or what I like.
Yes (Score:2)
Counter question (Score:2)
When was the time to start using them?
Re: (Score:2)
Your company, your brand, your work is getting spied on by the USA.
The social media brand was the way in to spy on you.
Outrage farmers. (Score:2)
Snake handlers eventually get bit. Lion tamers get eaten, and outrage farmers get turned against.
It's the natural order of things.
deNiro: You tawkin to me? (Score:2)
I 'm as anti-social as they come. Let me ask you again:
You talkin to me? There's no one else here; you tawkin to me?
Never more relevant (Score:2)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
ugh (Score:2)
I am really tired of crap like this:
"Take personal responsibility for your own social life. Go back to engaging flesh and blood people without tech companies serving as an intermediary. Eschew the narcissistic impulse to broadcast the excruciating minutiae of your life to the world. Refuse to accept the mandate that you must participate in social media in order to participate in society. Reclaim your autonomy."
How about YOU stop assuming others use social networks for the crap you probably used it for?
Join the debate on Facebook (Score:2)
Needs to be regulated (Score:2)
Hate to break it to you... (Score:2)
...but commenting on /. is social media.
It's time to stop using certain features, surely. (Score:3)
It's pretty much impossible NOT to reveal your social connections using social media, but it's the combination of insight into the nodes in that graph with the network that gives people with that data power over you.
So any kind of game, app or quiz where you reveal things about yourself or personal preferences is a bad thing. Forwarding and commenting on political news is probably a bad thing -- not in itself, but combined with the analytical power a social connection graph provides; it's one thing to exercise your free speech, it's another to contribute to a the greatest political surveillance network in history.
You might want to think twice about face tagging and geotagging your photographs too -- going by the Categorical Imperative. If enough people do that they've got a covert body tracking network.
People use social media because they serve a useful purpose, but they aren't aware of the unintended consequences; exploiting unintended consequences is those companies' entire business model.
No, but moderation in all things is good advice (Score:2)
Social media shouldn't be used to replace contact with the people you're close to, but it is useful for keeping in touch with people you aren't close to.
For me, social media is mainly useful for keeping tabs on musicians, authors and actors that I like. I like being able to find about their upcoming projects and appearances without spending hours of my time checking individual websites or hoping a news site will mention them. Even better, I can interact with
Right now, there isn't anything that comes close
apps which crossed the line (Score:2)
Yeah! (Score:2)
Social Media like Slashdot? (Score:2)
Slashdot sure has gone downhill since the corporate overlords came on board. Where are Cowboy Neal and Cmdr Taco when we need them?
Re: (Score:2)
Um... No, it isn't.
Re: Um... (Score:2)
Asocial media then.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
A friend of mine designed such a system for his PhD. It included a content-addressible storage system and any user could host their content in any cloud provider (or their own systems). As I recall, the cost was about $1-2/year, back in 2012 (cloud storage prices have gone down a lot since then).
I'm a bit surprised that someone like Amazon or Microsoft isn't pushing a social networking protocol with a reference implementation of the platform that's trivial to host in their cloud.
Re: (Score:2)
A global Bulletin Board System. The user hosts all data. Add some usenet, IRC and a great GUI.
Re: (Score:2)
So far evolution has not eliminated gross stupidity, so the prospect for future reductions in stupid do not look good.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Way ahead of you.
It also works. Potential employers are looking at Facebook profiles, so give them something to read. Rub shoulders with the best and greatest in your field (Photoshop is your friend), make sure you talk about all the great events and conferences you get invited to but have to decline going because you just can't find the time between all your charity work.
NO employer will ask you about it because they'd have to admit that they're spying on you. But ALL of them are looking.
Re: (Score:2)
They want to do facial recognition? Get the profile one hop from every face of interest.
The more they spy, the more junk they file and sort
Re: (Score:2)
Dilute? No. Use it to your advantage. They want all the information about you. Give it to them. Tell them everything ... they should think about you.
Re: (Score:2)
make your facebook page a fake news site about yourself. put so much fake stuff about yourself on your facebook page that they can't figure out anything about you. fake jobs, fake people, fake vacations, fake relatives. everything.
Doesn't work. Facebook builds profiles based on what your comments say and pages you join and things you like.
Re: (Score:2)
My target audience is usually "_blank" or "_top".
Re: (Score:2)
All those informations do not tell anyone who my friends are, what my hobbies and interests are, what my daily routine is, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
> Is It Time To Stop Using Social Media?
When was it ever time to *start*?
It's an anti-user business model by design.
End of discussion.
I think what's happened is some businesses feel they can promote their wares or marketing through a captive audience.
Re: (Score:2)
I could live without social media if I could keep in touch with family and friends and also find a place to talk about stuff with anyone who's interested.
If you can make IRC really user friendly so that the less technically inclined can use it and reincarnate usenet, it would be a very small start. In 20 years, we might have something.
I think AOL did this a while back but too many rowdy teenagers were cluttering the place.