I'm surprised there isn't a column for people who are reading Hacker News.<p>This guy for example:<p><a href="http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?=743264506" rel="nofollow">http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?=743264506</a>
A great example that should remind people that it's probably best to assume that everything they say or do online (offline as well) is now (and forevermore) public. Assume that anything you say or do has the ability to be seen by anyone and everyone around the globe instantly - without any methods of recourse. The genie is out of the bottle.<p>Hence one should adapt one's own behaviour and act accordingly (that doesn't mean that you should get paranoid - just be more careful :).<p>Reduce risk and watch what you say from now on.
I can't believe people are still publicly posting stuff about their bosses. Surely there has been enough press coverage about people getting fired for fb/twitter antics
I have some doubts about the site's disclaimer: <i>"I cannot be held responsible for any persons actions as a result of using this experiement."</i><p>If someone gets fired upon a comment you took out of context and put under "people who want to get fired" then I wouldn't bet the above statement as your best line of defence in a lawsuit.
You know what? Use that same GET method from the about page, mine for certain words, display analytics on a dashboard next to a stream and you've probably just put a few social media "consultants" out of work.<p>/dastardlyGrin
Reminds me on the who-is-not-at-home syndication from Facebook and Twitter. Even so these are scary, I really think they provide excellent privacy teaching moments. Hope you are going to keep this up for some time and enhance it with other categories.
This could have been done a little more sophisticated. Now it seems nothing more than some basic text searches.<p>For instance two people saying "Not Hungover AT ALL, I love these mornings" and "Hungover !" respectively are both in the hungover section. And in the doing drugs section there was one guy who was happy he actually quit.
Reading the comments I understand that it grabs public facebook data <i>if</i> you are logged, right ? Since I am currently logged and can't see any of my data it means that my facebook profile isn't public (or at least the data this page fetches aren't public) ?
Some 18 Year Old Made A Site That's Going To Get People Fired For Using Facebook<p><a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/lock-down-your-facebook-privacy-settings-2012-6" rel="nofollow">http://www.businessinsider.com/lock-down-your-facebook-priva...</a>
I can see this blossoming into a very titalating "Juicy Gossip" like startup involving delving deep into other people's lives.<p>I own Jussip.com (Juicy+Gossip) hit me up if interested. My contact info(s) can be found on my blog ChrisNorstrom.com
I'm guessing the site is making an API call to pull each user's thumbnail. Remember, your capped at 350 API requests per hour per APP ID. You should cache image links to avoid all the broken image icons.