Skip to main content

10 Facebook Privacy settings you really need to know

Facebook privacy settings are very complicated and they allow you to tweak almost every little part of your Facebook account. Unfortunately all users are not able to configure it because of its complicacy. The bad thing is that they usually change very often, so by the time you come to slightly understand it, it changes! We’ll try our best to keep you updated with it so that your experience on Facebook would be much better.


1. Sharing on Facebook


Account > Privacy Settings > Sharing on Facebook

Controlling the way you share content is quite complex and will probably make your head numb. But it’s important for you to take good look at it and decide which things you want to share and with whom.

By default all your content is shared with all your friends in your list, but you can adjust it according to your needs. Suppose you have 2 girlfriends and you want to share your stuff with your 1st girlfriend for instance, then you uncheck your 2nd girlfriends name from sharing list. Similarly you can decide with whom you want to share your images and so on. Note the ‘Preview my Profile’ button, it’ll help you to see how your profile will look to others.


2. Existing Photos


Account > Privacy Settings > Sharing on Facebook > Customize Settings > Edit album privacy for existing photos

Settings for sharing content on Facebook can be treacherous as they don’t always apply to all of your existing images. With this setting, you are able to go through your old albums & modify the privacy setting for each one, including your Wall Photos


3. Checking In to Places


Account > Privacy Settings > Sharing on Facebook > Customize Settings > Friends can check me in to Places

Another setting under Sharing on Facebook often goes unnoticed, and it can be very important, as it lets your friends check you in to Places. Having someone else telling the world where you are can be unpleasant and even dangerous in some cases. If you want to avoid it, disable this feature.


4. Connecting on Facebook


Account > Privacy Settings > Connecting on Facebook

Privacy settings for sharing content on Facebook are separated from the settings for connecting, which basically means sharing information about you: Your photo, gender, age, education, hometown etc. Furthermore, these settings determine how people can find you on Facebook. Can they do it simply by searching for your name? Can anyone add you as a friend, and send you a message?

Here, you can change those settings to Friends Only, Friends of Friends, Everyone or — in some cases — customize them. For example, if you get pestered by too many anonymous messages, you might consider letting only your friends send them. Be careful: If you set everything to the strictest available privacy setting, people may have a harder time finding you on Facebook.


5. Apps You Use


Account > Privacy Settings > Apps and Websites > Apps You Use

This is another painful setting as it usually means wading through dozens of apps and either removing them or editing the privacy settings for each of them individually.

We suggest removing all of the apps you’re not using (hint: If you can’t remember what it is, you probably don’t need it), and carefully reviewing the permissions you’ve given each individual app. For example, some apps like to post on your Wall even though they don’t require the option to function.


6. Instant Personalization


Account > Privacy Settings > Apps and Websites > Instant Personalization

You can opt-out of Instant Personalization on individual third-party websites, such as Pandora, simply by clicking on “No Thanks” when asked about it. However, on Facebook you can completely disable it by leaving the checkbox before “Enable instant personalization on partner websites” unchecked.


7. Info Accessible to Your Friends


Account > Privacy Settings > Apps and Websites > Info accessible through your friends

This is where Facebook’s privacy settings get really tricky, and most users don’t realize it. No matter how tight your privacy settings are, you’re still sharing some of your content and info with a group of people, even if it’s only your closest friends. However, what you share with them doesn’t necessarily end with them, especially if their privacy settings are lax. In the end, your friends might be sharing your info with third-party services, which is precisely what you want to avoid.

With this setting, you can set exactly what information is available to apps and websites if your friends use them.


8. Public Search


Account > Privacy Settings > Apps and Websites > Public Search

When someone searches for you on a search engine, they might get a preview of your public profile which, in some cases, can be very revealing. If you don’t want that to happen, you should turn this option off.


9. Friend Lists


Friends > Edit Friends > Create a List

If you’re a typical Facebook user, you have 130 friends, and it’s very likely that you don’t want to share every detail of your life with all of these people.This is where Friend Lists come into play. By creating lists of — for example — your family members, close friends and business acquaintances, you can finely tune the details you want to share with each list (as explained above).

Creating lists can be a bit dull at first, especially if you start doing it when you already have hundreds of friends, but once you set them up, it’s easy to add each new friend to a particular list.


10. Enabling HTTPS


Account > Account Settings > Account Security > Secure Browsing (HTTPS)

The last setting we’d like to highlight has more to do with security than privacy. However, if someone hacks into your account or sniffs your data (which can be easily done with an app like Firesheep), all the privacy settings in the world won’t help you protect it.

Recently, Facebook started introducing HTTPS support, which makes it a lot harder for someone connected to the same network to sniff your password and other data. It makes Facebook a bit slower, and certain features don’t work yet, but we highly recommend it as HTTPS is essential to online security on all web services, not just Facebook.

If the option isn’t available to you just yet, don’t worry. Facebook promised it will gradually roll out the feature in the following weeks.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

101 General Knowledge....you must know about this

Read This Also  Awesome FIFA World Cup facts You Probably Didn't Know Colorul Fact Which is True More 150 General Knowledge Click here .... 150 G.K . Also Read True Strange Facts Click here .... Strange Facts 1.   Is Time Travel Really Possible?   Based on the available theories, you can travel in future. 2.   How Much Percent of Brain We Use?  100% 3.  Which body part stays the same size from when we are born until we die?   Eyeball 4.  What’s the Color of Mirror?   Green 5.  Where Do Permanently Deleted Files Go in Computers?   Nowhere, it is still there. 6.  What is the Resolution of the Human Eye?   576 Megapixels 7.  Does Sunlight weigh anything?   Yes (By weight we mean mass) 8.  Where is the Center of Universe?   Everywhere 9.  Which Came First – The Egg or The Chicken?   The Egg 10. What If Everyone on Earth Jumped at Once?   Nothing Happen 11. Can You Fire a Gun in Space?   Yes 12. How Much Money Is There in the World?   75 trillion US dollar

Facebook Like Button in Different Languages

This is how the Facebook Like button reads like in different languages. Facebook first launched the Like button an year ago and its now added by more than 10,000 sites every day, according to the official Facebook page .

Cannot Open Google or Gmail in Chrome? Try this fix

Ever since I upgraded to the latest version of Google Chrome, I keep getting “socket” errors when trying to open Google, Gmail or any other website under the google.com domain. This isn’t as issue with my Internet connection as I can easily access the Google websites from IE and Firefox but they simply refuse to load inside Chrome with the following error: Error 15 (net::ERR_SOCKET_NOT_CONNECTED): Unknown error. The problem gets resolved when the computer is restarted but that’s just a temporary solution as the errors keep coming back. It turns out that this is a  known issue  in Google Chrome and has also been experienced by dozens of Google users on Twitter. Fix Socket Errors in Google Chrome While we wait for the Chrome team to fix the issue, the irony is that it only seems to affect Google websites, there’s one simple step you can perform to get rid of the socket errors without having to restart the computer. Open Google Chrome and type chrome://net-int