Comments (2 comments)

Conor / September 6th, 2006, 8:47 am / #

I don’t think revealing less information or befriending fewer people would really solve the problem as many Facebook users see it. The issue is precisely that what is being revealed cannot be altered with a couple strokes of the backspace key, as the new feeds log users’ actions. This means that now one is judged by one’s actions on Facebook, which seems to indicate that Facebook’s engineers have forgotten that the anonymity of action is what spurred the growth of online communities. It flies in the face of the idea of controlled identity, and that’s why users are upset. They want their real names, their beer pictures, their stupid comments, because those are the results of careful, though rather inane, calculation of social presentation. The fact that they can now be tracked as they tromp around Facebook makes them feel suddenly naked in the brush. It removes the wonder and mystery of digital life, dragging it down into boring metaphors of physical constraint.

Heliologue / September 6th, 2006, 9:13 am / #

Perhaps, but if these people really believed that having these items aggregated is the difference between privacy and a violation of privacy, then they’re dumber than I thought.

Not that it matters—I think these changes will be rolled back soon, anyway. The members have spoken.

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