Re: [Air-L] How does Facebook find friends?
Hi all, Regarding Marco's point, this is important because it goes back to the 'reciprocity' or whatever you'd like to call it of Facebook, namely that even if I have been extremely careful and guarded about what info I share on Facebook and what I allow it access to, the moment one of my friends has not done the same, and is in some way connected to information of mine (through a post comment, a shared photo, etc. etc.), then the profile is reopened in a sense. The only true privacy is not to be on it, but even that doesn't stop people posting photographs of you on there. Cheers, Lawson ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Sat, 25 Sep 2010 01:42:21 -0300 From: "Marco Toledo Bastos" <herrcafe@gmail.com> To: <air-l@listserv.aoir.org> Subject: Re: [Air-L] How does Facebook find friends? Message-ID: <001201cb5c6c$0c899e40$259cdac0$@com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Anders, This also got me thinking. It all started a few years ago when my hairdresser, who I went to once, and who has sent me a few emails, turned up as a FB suggestion. We didn't have any friends in common and I most certainly have NOT allowed FB to go thru my Gmail contacts (or any other account). This all had happened once before when FB suggested another person with whom I sure shared no friends whatsoever. Since I'm dead sure I haven't given Facebook permission to contact my Gmail account and FB sure isn't allowed to mine my cache, I was ready to go paranoid (seemed like Facebook was stealing my Gmail contacts). But after a few emails to friends and nerds of all stripes, we came up with the conclusion that it was the hairdresser who allowed FB to collect *her* contact info. That's how FB knew we had been in contact in a given moment. Bottom line: there are only two ways FB could have gotten that info from me. Either by mining my Chrome cache, and I refuse to consider this possibility, or breaking into Googles's office in Mountain View, since Gmail was the only place where I had that info stored. So getting back to your question, the kid might not know his uncle's e-mail, but my two cent is that the uncle's contact list sure includes the kid's name and/or his e-mail. Either way, this is not good. But it is the future, and the future is here. []s MTB ------------------------------
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Lawson Fletcher