tips to facebook privacy 2013 (so far)

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Get Secure! Facebook Privacy Tutorial Becky Benishek | November 2013

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Page 1: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Get Secure!

Facebook Privacy Tutorial

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 2: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

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Why should you care about privacy on Facebook?

“We Know What You’re Doing” is a site that gathers public Facebook

posts. That little globe icon next to your post really can mean the world is

watching!

With Graph Search, it just got easier for people to find you, what you’re

saying, and what you’re doing. That’s why you need to check your settings.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 3: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

In this tutorial, you will be able to:

• Set your own privacy level to make your Facebook presence

as secure as you can*.

• Control who sees your status updates, photos, and posts.

• Control who sees photos your friends upload of you, posts

they make on your Wall, and anything else they tag you in.

*As secure as you can be, short of not having a Facebook account at all.

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Page 4: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Already Know the Steps? Use The Shortcut

You can check and tweak your main privacy settings without having to go

beyond your own home page. Log in to Facebook. Next to your name, you

should see a little lock button:

Change who can see your posts, view your activity log, block people, and

more.

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For an in-depth look at each setting, please continue to the next page.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 5: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

I. Privacy Settings

On the top right of the page, click the arrow for a dropdown

menu. Select Privacy Settings or Settings (depending on

your account). If you only see Settings, then click Privacy

on the left.

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Page 6: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Privacy: Who Can See My Stuff?

• Who can see your future posts? This is the default setting for who can see

your status updates. Yet you can change this right from the status box when you

write a post, and that change will change the default too, so you’ll need to come

back here to reset it. For all the good it does.

• Review all your posts and things you're tagged in: This is your Activity

Log, where you can see--and tweak--every single update you’ve put on your

profile or posts you’re tagged in.

• Limit the audience for past posts: If you have or suspect you have any old

Friends of Friends or Public viewable posts and want to lock them down all at

once, change it here to Friends Only.

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Privacy: Who Can Contact Me?

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• Who can send you friend requests? It’s a personal choice, and you

have only two: Friend of Friends, or Everyone.

• Whose messages do I want filtered into my inbox? Basic filtering

means you’ll get your connected friends, but also people Facebook thinks you

may know. Strict filtering means messages from people you don’t know will go into

your Other folder, which is located next to your Inbox when you click on Messages

(and often easily forgotten).

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 8: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Privacy: Who Can Look Me Up?

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• Who can look you up using your email or phone number: If the only

people who would know your email or phone number are friends, setting both of

these to “Everyone” or “Friends of Friends” is fine. If you’re trying to keep a low

profile, then set to “Friends.”

• Do you want search engines to link to your timeline? If you don't want

to make it easy for people to see your Facebook profile in Google searches, make

sure that box is unchecked.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 9: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

II. Timeline & Tagging

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Click “Timeline and Tagging” on the left.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 10: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Timeline: Who can add things?

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• Who can post on your timeline? Do you want your friends to be able to post

directly on your Wall? Here’s where you make the choice: Friends, or No One

(but you). This does not affect someone commenting on a post already on your

Wall.

• Review Posts friends tag you in: Enable this option if you prefer to review

posts you get tagged in before they show up on your Wall for others to see.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 11: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Timeline: Who can see things?

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• Review what other people see. Click “View as” to see how your timeline

looks to the public or a specific friend. Make sure to click through your About and

Photos sections too.

• Who can see posts you've been tagged in: If someone tags you in their

post AND you've allowed it on your timeline, here’s where you set who else can

see it by default.

• Who can see what others post on your timeline: If you allow your

friends to write on your wall, this setting lets you choose who else can see those

posts. If you don’t want your mom to see zombie pic-spam from that one friend

(just me?), now’s the time to lock that down.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 12: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Timeline: Manage tags people add & tagging suggestions

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• Review tags added to your own posts before the tags appear on

Facebook: Enable Tag Review to ensure you know—and control—what people

tag you in that other people can see.

• When you're tagged in a post, who do you want to add to the

audience? If some of your friends aren’t friends with the tagger, you can

automatically let them see posts you’re tagged in.

• Who sees tag suggestions for photos that look like you? Facebook

will suggest name tags whenever someone uploads a photo that looks like you. If

you don’t want your name to come up, choose “No One.”

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 13: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Blocking: People and Apps

Click “Blocking” on the left. Here you can add friends to the Restricted list so

they only see public posts (this is good if you are concerned about defriending

them), block someone (friend or foe) outright, and make sure you never see

another Farmville app again.

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Page 14: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Click “Apps” on the left.

Start out by reviewing the apps you have, and editing what Facebook and

friends can see when you use them, in “Apps you use.”

App Settings

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Page 15: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Apps others use: What your friends do on Facebook can affect you! If you don’t

want your information shared just because a friend is using an app, click Edit,

uncheck everything, and save.

App Privacy: Apps Others Use

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Page 16: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

App Privacy: Instant Personalization

This setting lets you see what your friends are doing on certain websites.

Click Edit.

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Page 17: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Facebook will want to

make sure you’re sure.

You are.

Uncheck

this box.

App Privacy: Instant Personalization

Why not see what restaurant your friends like or what music they’re

listening to? The catch is these sites will also grab any information they can

to find out about YOU.

Close out of the unhelpful pop-up and:

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Page 18: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

App Privacy: The Old & Outdated

Old versions of Facebook for mobile: If you’re using an app that hasn’t

updated itself recently and doesn’t let you choose who sees your posts from

the app itself, set your privacy level here.

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Page 19: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

That’s it! Remember, you never know who’s watching…

Public information:

Good

Bad

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Page 20: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Bonus: How to Make it Harder to Find Your Profile

1. Click the dropdown arrow on the top right of your page and select Account Settings or

Settings.

2. Under General Account Settings, click Edit next to Username. You will first have to verify your

account with your cell phone before you can change your username.

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When people enter your name in a search engine to find you, if you’re not

using your real or full name, that may make it harder to find you (with Graph

Search, we can’t say for certain.)

3. Once you do that, you can change your

public username. Facebook would love for

you to use your real name. It’s possible not

to use your real name, but you didn’t hear

that from me.

Becky Benishek | November 2013

Page 21: Tips to Facebook Privacy 2013 (So Far)

Resources

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• The Always Up-to-Date Guide to Managing Your Facebook Privacy

• Scroll down to see two-factor authentication and other helpful tips.

• 20 Tips For Increasing Your Facebook Privacy And Security

• Tip #2 tells you how to group your friends into lists, a highly recommended

practice.

• Facebook Launches New Privacy Policies And You Still Can Be Used For Ads

• New as of 11/16/13.

Becky Benishek | November 2013