nding" old college or high school friends, and for us at New Trier many people will accept a friend request from someone they barely know just because they are in the same NT network. Because of this, people who you barely know are seeing all these details of your life.In the article they talk about how they want Facebook to crack down on their privacy modes. I think, especially as a teenage girl in a world full of some creeps, that's definitly a good idea. But right now you can hide everything from people who are not your friends. I think that should be enough. If you friend someone that should be like the invitation to stalk you basically, and it should mean that your okay with them looking at all your stuff.
But that is stuff we all know, and sometimes forget. This is where the article gets into how it's redefining privacy. Although everything thinks its a little weird at times how many people can see into your life, because of Facebook enough people are becoming accustom to this openness. The author Dan Flecther says, "Facebook did not invent social networking, but the company has fine-tuned it into a science". Founder of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, is not only breaking social networking down to a science he is trying to make the world more open.
Now some argue whether is it good to have a more open world. Do you agree with Zuckerberg? If not:
"Want to stop that trend? The onus, as always, is on you to pull your information. Starve the beast dead. None of Facebook's vision, be it for fostering peace and harmony or for generating ad revenue, is possible without our feeding in our thoughts and preferences" (Feltcher)
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