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Presenter: Diana Silveira, Novare Library Services

Social Media & Privacy

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Page 1: Social Media & Privacy

Presenter: Diana Silveira, Novare Library Services

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Today’s Goals

• Learn what privacy means to a variety of social media sites

• Learn how to change these settings

• Learn to monitor your library’s & your own online reputation.

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Don’t publish what you don’t want others to know.

Golden Rules

There is no true “Privacy” on the web.

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When you share information with others, they can also choose to make it public.

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Name

This helps your friends and family find you. If you are uncomfortable sharing your real name, you can always deactivateor delete your account.

Profile Pictures

This helps your friends and family recognize you. If you are uncomfortable making your profile picture public, you can always delete it by hovering over your photo and clicking "Change Picture."

Network

This helps you see whom you will be sharing information with before you choose "Friends and Networks" as a custom audience. If you are uncomfortable making your network public, you can leave the network.

Username and User ID

These allow you to give out a custom link to your profile or Page, receive email at your Facebook email address, and help make Facebook Platform possible. Learn more.

Always Public

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Status

Photos

Comments

Our “Likes”

Our Friends

What we optionally share

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“As a general rule, you should assume that if you do not see a sharing icon, the information will be publicly available.”

Default is “Public”

Status and Picture Settings

Your lists

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What does your profile look like to others?

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Take some time to review your timeline

Delete the embarrassing, awkward, the advertisements and other moments you want to forget.

Timeline

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Cookies - tracking when not logged into Facebook

Profiles for nonmembers

Deleting from view - but not really deleting

Oops! Who was caught

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“Our Services are primarily designed to help you share information with the world. Most of

the information you provide to us is information you are asking us to make public.”

Your public information is broadly and instantly disseminated

Twitter

https://twitter.com/privacy

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• Messages you Tweet

• Metadata provided with Tweets,

• Lists you create,

• People you follow

• Tweets you mark as favorites or Retweetand many other bits of information.

• Tweets are searchable by many search engines

• Delivered via SMS and our APIs to a wide range of users and services.

What does this include?

Think this is obvious – check out http://bit.ly/ROc7Od or http://bit.ly/ROcbgP

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Google+

Default is public

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In order to use Google+, you need to have a public Google Profile visible to the world, which at a minimum includes the name you chose for the profile. That name will be used across Google services and in some cases it may replace another name you’ve used when sharing content under your Google Account. We may display your Google Profile identity to people who have your email address or other identifying information.

Posts and other content shared by or with you - such as photos of you - may be visible on your profile to those with whom that content has been shared. You can use the profile editor to see how your profile appears to particular individuals.

Google Privacy Policy

http://www.google.com/intl/en/+/policy/

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Google+ and Google Search, Online Identity Verification, Anti-trust issues

Not without its own controversies

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Pinterest

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Get online

Take ownership of social media sites

Think before you post

Secure your accounts

Keep things private

Google Alerts (www.google.com/alerts)

Online Reputation

Image from http://chzb.gr/ROdiwV

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Deal with issue as soon as possible

Ask others to remove unwanted photos/information

Post often about yourself

“Overwhelm” the negative

Fixing your reputation

Cartoon: http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2009-02-01/

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“Big Data” and Privacy

• Creating “Customer Profiles”

• Make decisions on credit, loans, based upon where you shop

Everyday we are scattering "digital breadcrumbs" into the data-verse. Credit card purchases, cell phone calls, Internet searches: Big Data means memory storage has become so cheap that all data about all those aspects of our lives can be harvested and put to use. And it's exactly the use of all that harvested

data that can pose a threat to society. – NPR (http://n.pr/TmsQtQ)

Big Data

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[email protected]

Delicious.com/dee987/privacy

slideshare.net/dee987

https://www.facebook.com/NovareLibraryServices

877-816-9638

Contact Me

Diana Silveira