On Facebook and privacy

(The following was originally posted to Facebook yesterday, but given the subject of my previous post on how I use social networks, I thought it would be appropriate to include my thoughts here as well.)

The auto-sharing feature that I discovered today has me thinking about how privacy works in Facebook.

Facebook doesn’t protect your privacy as much as it sets up sharing contexts based on the connections people establish. Once you post something to facebook, there is nothing preventing it from being shared with everyone on facebook. The only privacy control that you have is that the post isn’t shared automatically with everyone but has to propagate between social graphs, and that propagation can only be initiated by people. I would guess that most posts are not shared forward, meaning that they stay within whatever sharing context you initially intended the post to have. If someone has a reason for sharing your post with their social graph, they can and there is nothing you can do to prevent them from doing so.

This is what passes for privacy on Facebook, and it does to a large extent mirror “real life”. If I tell 500 people that I had an artichoke and cheese sandwich for lunch, there is a good chance that they are not really going to pass that information on to anyone, mostly because they would (correctly) assume that other people wouldn’t be interested. If I tell 500 people that I’m away on vacation for two weeks and share a picture of the beach I’m sitting on, well, maybe a few might share that information with their social network, and I probably don’t care if most of those people do, but maybe there are a few where I do care, and what business did X have in sharing that with them? And why did I share that with X in the first place?

The answer to both of these questions is rooted in the fact that both X and I misunderstand what our social graphs of “friends” truely represent, that within this group of friends there are actually several circles of trust, ranging from our closest friends that we trust alot to acquaintences that we trust little more than strangers.

Yes, Facebook does provide the ability for us to create lists to represent these various circles of trust, but setting them up, maintaining them, and choosing which to use is extra work. Still, I think it is worth spending some time investigating these options so that I can refine my use of Facebook so that I can continue to use it to interact with people I know without worrying about where the information I share is going to end up!

A reflection on my use of social networks

Yesterday I shared the news that I had been recommended for reappointment for another 3-year term (yay!) on all three of the social networks that I actively participate in: Facebook, Twitter, and Google+.

I don’t use or think of all three networks the same way:

  • Facebook is my personal network: people I know or have at least met and chatted with a time or two. While I sometime share work-related information on Facebook, most of my activity there is more in the personal arena.
  • Twitter is more of a professional space for microblogging content related to my work as a librarian as well as my interests in technology, organizations, education, etc, etc.
  • I have to admit that Google+ is more of a placeholder. I tend to use it to share blog posts that I write (like this one) and other major events/items. But I spend far less time interacting with people in that space than in the other two.

I should also say that I probably spend the most time on Facebook, a bit less on Twitter, and far less on Google+.

Given this, the results of my posting my reappointment news are not surprising:

  • Google+: 177 people have me in circles –> 1 comment
  • Twitter: 536 followers –> 1 comment
  • Facebook: 550 friends –> 64 likes, 8 comments

Not surprising, but still something for me to think about. At the very least, I think this not only reflects but reinforces how I have chosen to use these various networks. The people I connect with on Facebook are of course more likely to react to personal news like this. I’ve also invested more in terms of interacting with people on Facebook, so it shouldn’t be surprising that my social connections in that space are stronger. It isn’t that I couldn’t have those same social connections in Twitter or Google+. I just haven’t chosen to use those spaces in that way. And I’m ok with that.