Kim Komando: Facebook privacy settings need your attention

BY KIM KOMANDO
Sunday, January 20, 2013
1/20/13 at 4:14 AM


Facebook is a fabulous way to connect with friends and family. Of course, Facebook is also a spectacular way to embarrass yourself.

Users post personal photos and intimate status updates that they think only a few friends will see. Then the posts get broadcast to friends of friends or - worse - everyone.

Anyone can be surprised by an episode of oversharing if they're not paying attention.

And Facebook's announcement this week of a new tool called Graph Search - "which will let you sift through photos, places and more that have been shared on Facebook" - also makes this a really good time to check some of your privacy settings.

Fortunately, Facebook has a new tool to help simplify your privacy settings.

When you're logged in, you'll see a lock icon in the top tool bar. Clicking on that brings up the Privacy Shortcuts menu, where you can manage the Big Three privacy concerns: Who can see my stuff? Who can contact me? How do I stop someone from bothering me?

Without dropping what you're doing and navigating somewhere else, you can quickly block (unfriend) someone, verify that only friends are seeing your posts, filter how you receive messages and control who can send you friend requests.

This dropdown menu also provides a shortcut to your Activity Log, where you can review your past activity. And you can use the new Request and Removal tool to ask friends to take down pictures of you.

The Privacy Shortcuts area is an improvement, but there are other important settings buried away that still need attention. To access these, click on See More Settings in the Privacy Shortcuts menu.

Under Privacy, check the answer to the all-important "Who can look me up?" You probably don't want that set to Everyone. I recommend Friends at least.

You probably don't want search engines finding your Facebook profile, either. I'd make sure that option is turned off.

If you regularly log in to websites with your Facebook account, you might be surprised by how many apps have access to your profile. Some apps may also have permission to make posts on your behalf. Modify these settings or remove apps you no longer use by going to Apps>>Apps You Use.

The "Apps others use" and "Instant personalization" subheadings also need attention.

You likely allow most of your friends to see your birthday, hometown and other personal data. "Apps others use" controls whether apps that your friends use can also grab that information. I recommend that you uncheck all the boxes.

"Instant personalization" allows information you've made public to be used by partner sites to customize your experience. If your goal is to share less, disable it.

Finally, go to the Ads setting. Change "Third Party Sites" and "Ads & Friends" to No One from the two dropdown menus.

If these options are set to "Only my friends," Facebook can pair your name and profile picture with a paid ad and show it to your friends. You don't want that.

Original Print Headline: Keep your Facebook private

Kim Komando hosts the nation's largest talk radio show about consumer electronics, computers and the Internet. Listen to her show from 1-4 p.m. each Sunday on KRMG am740 or fm102.3. To receive her newsletters, go to tulsaworld.com/komandonewsletters.

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