Facebook had its day in the sun years ago, maybe 8 year ago or longer, but itâs losing ground now and people are either dissolving their FB pages entirely, privitizing everything, or theâve just stopped posting. The creators of Facebook are coming out publically saying they knew how damaging and addictive Facebook would be when they started it, even hired casino experts to advise them on how to make it as addictive as possible, and then went on to make billions of dollars over it. These same people said theyâd never had or would have facebook pages themselves. It reminds me of the tobacco industry.
People post far more about their personal lives than they should on FB and make it public. Then they wonder why they got turned down for a job when the employer calmly says, âWell we saw your facebook pageâ. Stay off FB I say. Or leave it forever and never return. Itâs a trap for the unwary. They even discourage people from leaving FB. They offer âthree month holdsâ on data theyâve collected in case a person wants to return. That ought to be a red flag to everyone.
@Ezzat
Thanks.
IIdiko
You know, originally you couldnât privitize anything on Facebook. That all came later when people started getting wise to Facebookâs billionaire creators, and what they were up to, and started leaving or stopped posting. So, to keep people on, FB executives created these âprivacyâ settings. Okay, the privacy settings may keep other FB members from seeing something, but who else? Ever wonder about that? Do you really believe FB employees canât get around your âprivacyâ settings anytime they want? Why wouldnât they be able to? Then thereâs the government. Does anyone seriously believe a government agency canât get around FBâs privacy settings? Many people might say, âOh, Iâve got nothing to hide so itâs okay.â No, itâs not okay. Thatâs not what a right of privacy means.