Facebook Takes Privacy Seriously
Posted by Nick O'Neill on November 14th, 2007 5:30 PMToday I had the opportunity to speak with Chris Kelly, Chief Privacy Officer of Facebook. I had presented a question to him about rumors of Facebook employees modifying user profiles. There have been a number of articles on Valleywag as well as on here. Chris got the point across to me. Facebook takes privacy very seriously. Conversely, I wouldn’t expect Chris to say anything except for that. Chris spoke with conviction when discussing the Valleywag article so I have to say I believe him.
One other thing Chris noted is that if anyone violates Facebook’s internal policies on accessing their profile database (and people have done so), action will be taken against them. Unfortunately, he didn’t specify what action that would be but Facebook is taking privacy seriously. While Facebook (especially their new services) has serious privacy implications, I now believe that Facebook is taking the proper precautions to ensure the safety of user data.
One of my primary remaining concerns is simply that Facebook’s privacy policy makes no statement about restricting access to employees. Chris clearly stated that there are strong restrictions in place. Unfortunately we’ll never know what those are but the bottom line is that Chris Kelly has the job of ensuring that people believe Facebook is a secure environment to reveal all of their personal information. It must be a challenging job!







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November 16th, 2007 at 9:07 am
I missed the whole part about HOW they protect privacy. Just because they say that take privacy seriously doesn’t make it so. Their privacy and security policy are still the weaker than all of their major competitors. While MySpace, Google, Yahoo and Microsoft all put specifics into their privacy and security policies about protecting users from employees and so on, Facebook leaves this out. This isn’t by accident.
November 16th, 2007 at 10:07 am
I missed the whole part about HOW they protect privacy. Just because they say that take privacy seriously doesn’t make it so. Their privacy and security policy are still the weaker than all of their major competitors. While MySpace, Google, Yahoo and Microsoft all put specifics into their privacy and security policies about protecting users from employees and so on, Facebook leaves this out. This isn’t by accident.