{"id":12874,"date":"2010-08-27T12:17:43","date_gmt":"2010-08-27T17:17:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/?p=12874"},"modified":"2010-08-27T12:17:43","modified_gmt":"2010-08-27T17:17:43","slug":"your-friends-complain-about-facebook-privacy-but-what-do-they-give-away","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/10.10.2.102\/creevacom\/index.php\/2010\/08\/27\/your-friends-complain-about-facebook-privacy-but-what-do-they-give-away\/","title":{"rendered":"Your Friends Complain About Facebook Privacy, But What Do They Give Away?"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/p>\n

Ah…The Facebook privacy issues.<\/p>\n

Doesn’t it seem that a portion of your friends goes nuts every other month over some Facebook<\/a> privacy flap? This month is Facebook Places<\/a>, earlier this month was the Defcon data harvest<\/a>\u00a0and earlier things like overly complicated control settings<\/a>. In another month or two it will be something else. First and foremost we have learned with Microsoft over the years that the market leader will get blamed for every little misstep. I love mocking Microsoft, but I’m writing this on a Windows 7 netbook (I also use Ubuntu, OSX, IOs, Maemo, etc.). So the majority of this vocalization is from a minority which makes it sound like a bigger problem than really exists.<\/p>\n

So we know that a vocal minority can get everyone worked up and excited. People that don’t understand the issue will always latch onto something if it sounds scary enough. The less they understand about the issue, the scarier it sounds, and the more likely they are to get worked up over it. Take the dihydrogen monoxide<\/a> hoax for example; here is the information on dihydrogen monoxide:<\/p>\n

Dihydrogen monoxide:<\/p>\n