Week 4 Digital Overload and Privacy Summer 2013 HUM140

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Transcript of Week 4 Digital Overload and Privacy Summer 2013 HUM140

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Watch Frontline: The Digital Nation

Running time approx: 1:30 hr.http://video.pbs.org/video/1402987791

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PRIVACY

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Privacy

Self- Disclosure

“There is a tendency to be impulsive and not to always look at possible consequences, plus the sense of invincibility that masks vulnerability beneath” Elaine Leader

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“The reality is that nothing on Facebook is really confidential. Facebook is founded on a radical social premise -- that an

inevitable enveloping transparency will overtake modern life."

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The Machine is US/ing Us

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6gmP4nk0EOE

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Take the Quizhttp://www.aclu.org/privacyquiz/

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The Importance of Critical Thinking Skills

Youth as actively constructing their social and cultural worlds, not as innocent victims or

passive recipients of media messages

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Facebook: The Entire Web Will Be Social

By Liz Gannes Apr. 21, 2010

• Social plugins are little widgets

that bring Facebook to the rest of the web. They offer “instant personalization”

• Creates a persistent relationship with you around that content. Sites give Facebook semantic information around the thing you liked — for instance, the

title, type, genre and city for a

band you like on Pandora.

http://www.pandora.com/#/stations/create/

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http://www.wiredsafety.org/fbprivacy/index.htm

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Privacy ParadoxAn Oxymoron

Young people will freely give up personal information to join social networks on the Internet.

Afterwards, they are surprised when their parents read their journals.

"There's a big difference between publicly available data and publicized data.”

Dr. Dana Boyd, co-author a newly published book: Hanging Out, Messing Around, and Geeking Out: Kids Living and Learning with New Media.

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Where and how you give up

your privacy

(anyone can badmouth you with the world and you may be helpless to stop it)

1. Messaging and online communication

2. Photo and video sharing sites

3. Giving reviews and opinions

4. Social bookmarking and tagging

5. Communities and groups

6. Virtual worlds and gaming

7. Collaboration and sharing

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Protecting Your Privacy Tutorialcomplete this two-part tutorial

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Protecting Your Privacy Tutorial

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Creepers Paradise~Facebook has got your number for the world to see~

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A word or two about passwordsand…. hacking Facebook

• No birthdates or social security numbers

• No mother’s maiden name

• No universal password

• Yes to long passwords (over eight characters)

• Yes to random patterns – first letter of each word in your favorite song with your favorite number.

• Yes to changing it frequently

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wu6U_6AMneU

THIS VIDEO IS FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THE DANGERS OF BEING HACKED ON FACEBOOK.

DO NOT ATTEMPT THE PROCEDURES SHOWN!!

YOU WILL BE ASKED TO COMPLETE A SURVEY.

THIS IS A GRAVE DANGER IN AND OF ITSELF

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Your “How to Guide”https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/01/how-protect-your-privacy-facebooks-graph-search

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http://apps.facebook.com/bd-safego/

Use this link to check your Facebook Privacy.

No need to sign up for bitdefender service! This is free the other stuff isn’t.

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How do you check out?

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Not Google too !#@http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBAAFd-1L4M&feature=related

• Google has been Hoovering up data from open WiFi networks around the world -- some 600 gigs' worth, according to the AP -- which is tantamount to wiretapping and may well violate federal and international laws.

• When Google sends its fleet of camera-equipped cars into the streets to snap pictures of your neighborhood for its Street View product, these cars are also collecting something a little extra: The name and unique MAC address of every open WiFi network they encounter along the way.

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What is datahow does it affect privacy?

We need to educate ourselves by reading those terms of service contracts, noting which sites are sharing and which ones aren’t as well as being vigilant as to what kind of personal data we’re so eagerly sharing with the world.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8hdl-Lwzy7Y&feature=player_embedded

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Facebook users are notorious for sharing too much information.

Foursquare doesn’t just broadcast your location to your selected friends; it also serves as a game,

pairing virtual rewards with real activities.

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Foursquare is a new social network where users can post their current location to up

to 900 friends.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFXzyJ8mUh4

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“These new technologies make it increasingly easy to share potentially sensitive personal information, like your exact location. People might be over-sharing without knowing about it. For example, you might relay your Foursquare location to your public Twitter account and by doing this expose the message to the whole world (Twitter: "Our default is almost always to

make the information you provide public").

http://pleaserobme.com/

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The owners have shut down the site , but you get the idea.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfZROP2ky4I

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Personal Story:Took my family to Ireland.

A family member posted it on Facebook.Our house was burglarized.