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Facebook Privacy Loophole - Who's looking at your pictures?

Here's how it works: When you post pics, only people who are your friends can see them.  However, if I am friends with "Jane" and Jane comments on "Sam's" picture, this comment (and Sam's picture) get posted for ME to see.  And I've never met Sam in my life.  Not only that, but I can click on the picture and see the whole album of all Sam's pictures.  Just the one album though.  So, poor Sam is getting his pictures looked at by every single person who is Jane's friends.  And, the same goes for anyone else who comments on his picture. 

Imagine that, all your friends friends can look through your entire album every time that friend comments on a picture. So until Facebook closes this privacy loophole you might want to protect your friends privacy, by not commenting on pictures. Imagine what parents, coworkers, and others think when they see pictures of you that you don't want them to see!

Comments
Who cares, this is how it is on myspace unless you make your albums private.
# Posted By Ricky | 9/4/08 10:52 AM
WRONG! How old is this article? how about setting the security option of "ONLY MY FRIENDS" and not "FRIENDS OF FRIENDS"?? this website is a waste of space, bandwidth and time.
# Posted By Cide | 9/4/08 10:55 AM
How many people know they have to change their default privacy settings. I bet 99% of people get caught in this loophole. Thanks
# Posted By Shannon | 9/4/08 11:07 AM
cide is a nob.
# Posted By Rob | 9/4/08 2:10 PM
Or... you just don't post private stuff on the web... :S
# Posted By keke | 9/9/08 10:17 AM
Very true about being able to view thier photos...howerver, can we really have privacy on 'facebook' and myspace??
# Posted By digiwebbs | 10/10/08 4:33 PM
Who cares....If you don't want people to see then don't put the photos on Facebook...
# Posted By Anita | 11/2/08 2:23 AM
The fact of the matter is that it's not your own photos that are the problem, If I upload an album I can set it so only my friends can see it.

However If someone tags me in a photo I have no control of who can see that photo whilst I am tagged as being in the photo. I can untag myself but by this point people who I don't want to see the photo may have already seen it and depending on the circumstances involved this could have major consequences. i.e. getting the sack.
# Posted By Jonny | 11/5/08 9:48 AM
Cide is right. You can set it so this isn't a problem.
# Posted By B | 11/8/08 11:52 PM
there is also a security setting on facebook that lets you choose who can and who can't see tagged pictures of yourself...........
# Posted By jc | 11/28/08 5:57 AM
cide IS a nob!
# Posted By b | 12/2/08 6:40 PM
The best way to lock people out of looking at your specific albums is this way:
1) Make a friends list of people that u want to limit
2) Go to your photo album page
3) Click on Album Privacy
4) You should see a drop down list of "Who can see this?" - now open the list and click CUSTOMIZE
5) At the bottom of the "Edit Photo Album Privacy" window you should see "Except These People"
6) Add the friends list of Limited Friends that you made in step 1 to the "Except These People" list
..
Now everyone except those in your limited list can see the pics!

Done!
# Posted By Andrew Martin | 12/12/08 2:29 PM
Cide is not a knob.

if u don't know the privacy settings... then don't post pictures
# Posted By smart cookie | 12/15/08 1:24 PM
The real danger in these kind of sites is that they give users, young ones especially, a false sense of anonimity.

.. and what I've been hearing from a lot of people: I don't want my business contacts on my FaceBook. Personal friends and business friends are two different things entirely, and I think most people have two different faces they show in the different profiles. Unless FaceBook can come up with some smart way to have separate social networks (with separate profiles) under the same login, I don't think LinkedIn has too much to worry about.

I happened to visit a group where a picture of someone was posted. Another member wrote, "Isn't that [Name Omitted]?" The author responded, "Yes. He doesn't know, but I don't think he'll mind." It was perfectly innocuous in this case, but Name Omitted might prefer not to have a photo posted in a network that is accessible to millions of people.

http://www.facebookunmasked.com
# Posted By Facebook Unmasked | 12/29/08 2:37 AM