U.S. privacy organizations have expressed concerns about new sharing
features on Facebook. In a letter of the members of the relevant U.S.
regulator Federal Trade Commission (FTC) are the privacy advocates
questioned in particular whether the ticker is reconciled with the
accepted during registration data protection provisions of the social
network in line. Continue to criticize the privacy advocates that
Facebook tracked via cookies and browsing behavior of its members who
have been logged in the social network. The Authority is asked to
consider whether the changes constitute a violation of U.S. consumer
protection laws.
At last week's F8 developer conference featured automatic or "smooth"
parts ("frictionless sharing") are also status messages have published,
the members do not explicitly approved for publication. These include
events in games, watched television shows and movies and music being
heard. Data protection organizations, led by the Electronic Privacy
Information Center (EPIC), complain that many would be deprived of
private information made public and the members control over their data.
The multi-layered privacy settings are also barely see through what have
been done in recent days to a few irritations.
A Facebook spokesperson told CNet against the U.S. industry publication,
"some groups, do not believe people should have the option of the music
that they heard or share any other content simply with their friends. We
could not disagree."
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