Originally published: June 26, 2012
Last updated: June 26, 2012 - 9:33pm
When I called Facebook to ask why the company had changed the settings for the display of people’s e-mail addresses without their permission, potentially violating users’ privacy, I was told that the swap was not a “privacy” change, but rather a “visibility setting” change. I offered a genuinely confused response to Jaime Schopflin, a Facebook spokeswoman I spoke with. “Um, isn’t changing the visibility of something actually changing the privacy setting?” I asked. “No,” Ms. Schopflin said, explaining that they are two different things. To Facebook, the words privacy and visibility may be as different as peas and carrots. But Facebook users and one linguistic expert I talked to seem to disagree. Jesse Sheidlower, the editor at large of the Oxford English Dictionary, said Facebook’s effort to draw such a distinction was “worse than playing semantics.”
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Facebook vs. Twitter
- What Instagram’s New Terms of Service Mean for You
- Facebook changes everyone's listed emails to '@facebook.com'
- Gigya Rolls Out Privacy Seal For Sites With Social Log-Ins
- Looking at Facebook’s Friend and Relationship Status Through Big Data
- Upending Anonymity, These Days the Web Unmasks Everyone
- Facebook Faulted for Storing Data on Nonmembers
- FTC official: Sharing on social sites ‘can’t be forced’
- Apple and Google to Meet With Senator Schumer Over Privacy
- Facebook Changes Privacy Settings, Again
- In Social Media Postings, a Trove for Investigators
- The Facebook president in need of new friends
- Facebook Retreats on Online Tracking
- Facebook sued over whether teens can 'like' ads
- A Primer on Facebook Privacy Changes: In Which Your Vote Probably Won’t Change Anything
Location
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

