A Flashy Facebook Page, at a Cost to Privacy
Add-Ons to Online Social Profiles Expose Personal Data to Strangers
Facebook
fanatics who have covered their profiles on the popular social
networking site with silly games and quirky trivia quizzes may be
unknowingly giving a host of strangers an intimate peek at their lives.
Those mini-programs, called widgets or applications, allow users to
personalize their pages and connect with friends and acquaintances. But
they could pose privacy risks. Some security researchers warn that
developers of the software have assembled too much information -- home
town, schools attended, employment history -- and can use the data in
ways that could harm or annoy users.
"Everything requires you to give access to personal information or
it forces you to ask your friends to do the same -- it becomes a real
nuisance," said David Dixon, 40, an information technology consultant
in Columbia who recently deleted most of the applications he had
downloaded to his Facebook profile after reading on a blog that
developers may have access to his information. "Why does a Sudoku
puzzle have to know I have two kids? Why does a postcard need to know
where I went to college?"