Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg talks about the social network site's new privacy settings in Palo Alto, Calif., Wednesday, May 26, 2010.
Marcio Jose Sanchez, Associated Press
NEW YORK — In Facebook's vision of the Web, you would no longer be alone and anonymous. Sites would reflect your tastes and interests — as you expressed them on the social network — and you wouldn't have to fish around for news and songs that interest you.
Standing in the way is growing concern about privacy from Facebook users — most recently complaints that the site forced them to share personal details with the rest of the online world or have them removed from Facebook profiles altogether.
Facebook responded to the backlash Wednesday by announcing it is simplifying its privacy controls and applying them retroactively so users can protect the status updates and photos they have posted in the past.
"A lot of people are upset with us," CEO Mark Zuckerberg acknowledged at a news conference at Facebook's Palo Alto, Calif., headquarters.
The changes came after Facebook rolled out a slew of new features in April that spread its reach to the broader Web. Among them was a program called "instant personalization" that draws information from a person's profile to customize sites such as the music service Pandora. Some users found it creepy, not cool.
Privacy groups have complained to regulators, and some people threatened to quit the site. Even struggling MySpace jumped in to capitalize on its rival's bad press by announcing a "new, simpler privacy setting."
To address complaints its settings were getting too complex, Facebook will now give users the option of applying the same preferences to all their content, so that with one click you can decide whether to share things with just "friends" or with everyone.
For those who found it complicated to prevent outside websites and applications from gaining access to Facebook data, there's now a way to do so in a couple of clicks.
It's not clear whether the changes will quell the unease among Facebook users, which has threatened to slow the site's breakneck evolution from a scrappy college network to an Internet powerhouse with nearly a half-billion people.
"They've lost the users' trust. That's the problem," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, an advocacy group. "In the earlier days, there was time to regain it. It's not so clear now. I think it's getting more serious than making changes and moving on."
Some of Facebook's loudest critics offered cautious praise but indicated the young company will need to do more to prove it cares about privacy.
- KSL-TV welcomes 2 new anchors, new format
- West Jordan teen releases 5th iPhone app
- Studies try to find why poorer people are...
- Law school grad pays off $114,460 in debt...
- 18 cheap ways to captivate teens
- Top 10 poorest states in America
- KSL TV news icon Bruce Lindsay calls it a career
- Millennials love to spend money they don't have
- Billboard battle heats up as company...
29 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
26 - Millennials love to spend money they...
13 - KSL TV news icon Bruce Lindsay calls it...
12 - Law school grad pays off $114,460 in...
9 - House GOP plans summer tax cut vote
7 - Consumer confidence highest in 4½...
6 - Why Americans aren't saving for retirement
6






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments