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22 Comments
- IgorUnchained, on 06/25/2009, -1/+8The European Union could do something about the million+ cctv cameras in London ALONE....if they REALLY cared about privacy.
- Lefts, on 06/25/2009, -2/+6In all honesty, if you really expected anything you put on a social networking site to remain private, you are a ***** moron.
- mithrasinvictus, on 06/25/2009, -1/+4There's other personal information like email addresses, passwords, browsing history, purchasing history etc. that should be protected though.
- sockpuppets, on 06/25/2009, -1/+4We know who you are. Your tastiness will be assimilated.
- Bluesky0010, on 06/25/2009, -0/+3Don't know why everyone is against beefing up privacy rules. Facebook shouldn't be allowed to pull the ***** they tried a while ago saying they own all the data you put on a facebook page. Some of those pictures that are uploaded (besides the fact it not being facebooks business or right to hold onto them) are pictures of people that didn't upload them.
- steelersfan7roe, on 06/25/2009, -0/+2Good news for privacy.
- dshortey, on 06/25/2009, -2/+4The best privacy is not registering for an account at all.
- bpwned, on 06/25/2009, -0/+2Besides, the EU has not the authority to tell London what to do. I'm a big supporter of the EU, but here I have to say: thank god it can't do that. It's really none of its business.
- lekahe, on 06/24/2009, -5/+6I think the demands of European governments and EU are totally unreasonable! Most of the people making the decisions have no idea about social networks. I have a hard time convincing people that networks should be taught in school instead of banning them...(I am an European and in EU)
- steelersfan7roe, on 06/25/2009, -2/+3The simplest way to protect your privacy? Never leave your home. Never open your blinds. Never pick up the phone.
- frontaxle, on 06/25/2009, -0/+1Superpoke was too much of a good thing
- Countess666, on 06/25/2009, -1/+2all the camera's are on public roads and streets. so its public. anything you do there is by definition NOT private.
- gordigor, on 06/25/2009, -1/+2From the title: such as Facebook (Facebook) and MySpace (MySpace)
Thanks for pointing out that Facebook is actually Facebook and MySpace is actually MySpace. - kentifer, on 06/25/2009, -1/+2Anthony Breach
Lancashire (UK)
16 years old
Phalanxia@hotmail.co.uk - afgromeo, on 06/25/2009, -1/+1This is a great decision, finally someone step up to protect our privacy. I am specially pissed of at Facebook.com who had suddenly decided that they own all our data stupid bustards, They are ***** unbelievable.
- Padijun, on 06/25/2009, -2/+2Seriously? it's already hard enough to creep on facebook
- Lefts, on 06/25/2009, -1/+1Yet, that's where the money is.
- kyloe, on 06/25/2009, -0/+0Transparent or not, people are saving industry a lot of time, hassle and money, by simply profiling themselves into a mass market.
- inactive, on 06/24/2009, -6/+6The simplest way to protect your privacy? Don't use Myspasm or Facebook.
- Tenoq, on 06/25/2009, -3/+1I'm pretty sure that will get you a McBan with cheese, kentifer.
- jman583, on 06/25/2009, -5/+2Bacon.
- inactive, on 06/25/2009, -3/+0My biggest concern is employer's requesting looking up on facebook and other networking sites, they are obviously looking for dirt to dig up on the people, and no one is clean if you dig deep enough.
Facebook should encrypt all pages, make them all private, and ban the ip of all known company networks, have people submit the ip address of their own company anonymously, make it hard to employers to nose about in private lives.



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