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  • Data mining and trust

    • 18 Oct 2011
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    • data mining privacy
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    For Siri to be really effective, it has to learn a great deal about the user. If it knows where you work, where you live and what kind of places you like to go, it can really start to tailor itself as it becomes an expert on you individually. This requires a great deal of trust in the institution collecting this data. Siri didn’t have this, but Apple has earned their street cred.

    Developers are realizing that they can deliver amazing experiences when they understand more about the user. However, users today are careful to not give away too much of that information. With Apple’s strong reputation behind it, there’s a massive potential for success here.

    via labs.vectorform.com

    The lead developer of the original Siri app on the importance of background information to making the app work.

    Curious how Facebook, Google and Apple are taking such different approaches toward building trust of their users.

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  • Why don't more web apps explain their privacy settings this clearly?

    • 18 Aug 2010
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    • great examples location privacy web apps
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    Foursquare does a great job of explaining the app's privacy settings: http://foursquare.com/privacy/grid .

    Sharing on foursquare

    YOUR CHECK-INS

      Where Displayed Viewable by foursquare friends Viewable by wider foursquare community
        Default How to adjust Default How to adjust
    The location and time of each of your check-ins Friends tab Yes • Check in "off the grid" No  
    Website homepage Yes • Check in "off the grid" No  
    Who's Here Yes • User Settings (can opt out of Who's Here)
    • Check in "off the grid"
    Yes • User Settings (can opt out of Who's Here)
    • Check in "off the grid"
    Check-in History on Profile page Yes (friends can see the five most recent check-ins) • Check in "off the grid"
    • Check in History page (can delete individual check-ins)
    No  
    via foursquare.com
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  • Facebook privacy: Limit what your friends can share about you

    • 22 Apr 2010
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    • facebook privacy social-media
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    If your friend uses an application that you do not use, you can control what types of information the application can access. Please note that applications will always be able to access your publicly available information (Name, Profile Picture, Gender, Current City, Networks, Friend List, and Pages) and information that is visible to Everyone.

    • Personal info (activities, interests, etc.)
    • Status updates
    • Online presence
    • Website
    • Family and relationship status
    • Relationship details (significant other, looking for, etc.)
    • Education and work
    • My videos
    • My links
    • My notes
    • My photos
    • Photos and videos I'm tagged in
    • About me
    • My birthday
    • My hometown
    • My religious and political views
    via facebook.com

    What can your friends share about you? Lots of info.

    Facebook now checks most of these boxes by default, meaning that applications your friends install can access much of your profile. Whether or not you have also installed the app.

    I prefer a little less sharing, thank you.

    Hat tip to Peter Feld for inspiring me to look into this. http://peterfeld.tumblr.com/post/540720403/a-quick-facebook-privacy-cleanse-n...

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  • Crowdsourcing road congestion data: Google

    • 25 Aug 2009
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    • code privacy
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    When you choose to enable Google Maps with My Location, your phone sends anonymous bits of data back to Google describing how fast you're moving. When we combine your speed with the speed of other phones on the road, across thousands of phones moving around a city at any given time, we can get a pretty good picture of live traffic conditions. We continuously combine this data and send it back to you for free in the Google Maps traffic layers.
    Media_http4bpblogspotcom7zyqyi4xigkspn37wypo5iaaaaaaaaeogrot1m1yhqm4s400gmmarterialsz15png_jhencijebcdsnog
    via googleblog.blogspot.com

    Google Maps collects travel speed data from GPS-enabled phones, which Google turns into traffic congestion reports. Privacy is paramount: the data is collected anonymously. Google deletes trip start and end points from its databases.

    Curious to know how "anonymous" data collection works in practice, as Google servers certainly know the IP address of a reporting device.

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    EL Studio Communications, LLC builds stories, software and strategies to help you connect online.

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