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53% did not delete FB or tighten their privacy settings post Cambridge Analytica

22 pointsby Sonnol53about 7 years ago

7 comments

georgebarnettabout 7 years ago
A single poll on a Silicon Valley social bubble chat app is not an appropriate way to draw any conclusions regarding a 2 billion person service.<p>It’s embarrassing the author is even suggesting it’s relevant.
marssaxmanabout 7 years ago
I didn&#x27;t change my privacy settings, because I already assume that everything I do on Facebook is essentially public, like any other bulletin board type service.<p>Also, I only connect to Facebook via Chrome, on my desktop Mac at home, where I use Firefox for all other browsing; on my phone and laptops, I don&#x27;t use Messenger or connect to Facebook at all. I&#x27;m sure they have found sneaky ways of figuring out more about me than I&#x27;d prefer, but not so much that additional security precautions seem worthwhile.
mrnobody_67about 7 years ago
Alternative headline: 47% of users tightened their privacy settings or deleted Facebook post Cambridge Analytica
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jprissiabout 7 years ago
Not everyone cares about privacy and you can&#x27;t force them to. It&#x27;s still a good thing to try to sensitize as much persons as possible but we can&#x27;t be surprised when some of them don&#x27;t feel concerned. And there are probably also some people who had already set their privacy settings before.
scottie_mabout 7 years ago
If nearly 14% did, that’s amazing and a much larger percentage than I would have ever expected. Of course depending on the methodology, and given the diversity of FB accounts, 5000 in a survey is probably meaningless. Still, let’s give it a huge error bar and say it’s between 7% and 21%. That’s still a ton of people, and you have to wonder if they were people central to the content and networks that keep others around.<p>The only way to tell will be the trend, not the snapshot.
ggg9990about 7 years ago
I already had my privacy settings where I wanted them (about 90% of the way to “fully public all the time”)
trinkletingasabout 7 years ago
As long as I get completely irrelevant ads, I like to think I am fine. :-)