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	<title>The Friendster Layouts &#187; Computers</title>
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	<description>talking about social networking sites</description>
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		<title>Privacy in Social Networking Accounts</title>
		<link>http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/privacy-in-social-networking-accounts/</link>
		<comments>http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/privacy-in-social-networking-accounts/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Dec 2011 08:28:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>adm</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/?p=310</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[All of us have a minimum of one. A Facebook account. A Twitter feed. Why not a lingering MySpace page. Probably in partnership with these you&#8217;re using a LinkedIn page for connecting to function contacts; posting location information through 4Square; or employ a personalized iGoogle homepage. To be honest social networks have end up being [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>All of us have a minimum of one. A Facebook account. A Twitter feed. Why not a lingering MySpace page. Probably in partnership with these you&#8217;re using a LinkedIn page for connecting to function contacts; posting location information through 4Square; or employ a personalized iGoogle homepage. To be honest social networks have end up being the hottest technique to stay in touch using your friends, co-workers, lost acquaintances, even family. Social networking has allowed individuals to maintain vast web sites that span across the globe. Individuals, groups, and organizations are choosing social network sites to arrive at out over their communities. They&#8217;ve become the preferred means to spread interest in specific topics and advertise upcoming local events. Staying in touch with individuals that influence our lives hasn&#8217;t ever been easier. But<br />
together with the advantages these web sites offer, it arrives with a profound price: our privacy.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/sn.jpg"><img class="alignleft  wp-image-311" src="http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/sn.jpg" alt="sn Privacy in Social Networking Accounts" width="237" height="143" title="Privacy in Social Networking Accounts" /></a>We pay the vast majority of your own information to these sites: where we work, our telephone numbers, home addresses, emails, personal history, plus much more. Pretty much everything information is accessible by not simply the system administrators of these companies but also the people we accept as our friends; not forgetting whatever information left unprotected which can be accessed by individuals or the police surfing online networks. Through our posts we offer information about our spending habits, where we&#8217;re also, your own what it really popular culture, where we shop most, the events individuals mundane lives. We upload photos, create blogs, post comments, and discuss many people posts. Through all this, we are creating mass information databases that could teach enterprising parties considerably with regards to the types of people we<br />
are. As we increasingly put really our private lives into these vast social information databases growing problem is mounting in regards to the degree of privacy someone has on the internet the potential profits that could be generated from data collected of you and also your friends through<br />
advertising and marketing posts.</p>
<p>Revenue is it being invested and generated from information gleaned on social network sites. Brands like Gnip are making money as social media aggregators by designing tools that search user posts for info on specific products and events. These details they collect is then being offered along with other organizations to use they wish. Information is usually collected on our political views, our distaste first store over another, what products we bought, what products we are using, how you are utilizing products, our taste in food, the music we love to, the places where we live, etc. Companies can become familiar with a lot with regards to the people who are making posts about them (i.e. who your mind is, where they live, where they work, who their friends are, an individual&#8217;s age, even what that person appears to be). Let&#8217;s suppose a government like China wished to start aggregating several of this review.<span id="more-310"></span></p>
<p>The point is that the information folks are posting in private to get distributed to friends and acquaintances they&#8217;ve already made on the web is not in fact private. Although average Facebook surfer cannot access a non-public account without friending that person does not always mean a company cannot obtain more knowledge about what you&#8217;re really posting when you are performing full of search of &#8220;News Feed&#8221; comments. Now not all information a company collects from ones own posts seems malicious. Precisely what somebody who is internet service provider (ISP) does research online on twitter to check out anybody accomplish the majority of their on the web? When joined with ever rising issue of net neutrality ( http://lifehacker.com/5720407/an-introduction-to-net-neutrality-what-it-is-what-it-means-for-you-and-what-you-can-do-about-it ) said ISP may be achieving this so as to charge more for internet use at these peak gaming times or pick which parts of the world accomplish the most online gaming then raise websites rates over these areas. This won&#8217;t include all of the other information companies can gather to implement in expanding their returns.</p>
<p>Bug companies aggregating comments form of hosting gain isn&#8217;t the only issue to become occupied with when posting private data about the internet. Hackers will always be a worry on-line. Web sites are huge information databases that may produce a hacker which has a vast number of content make use of. Hackers try websites like these with ease and STEAL data on millions of people. They will use information taken from your to master the place you buy online, stalk you, access your email, or obtain specifics relating to your friends. On a yearly basis a multitude of Fortune 500 companies get hacked. Many methods from account login information to personal stats are stolen within these security breaches. Hackers happen to be know to implement hacked social networking accounts to steal personal data for creating fake shopping accounts, spam user contacts, impersonate users, discover information regarding internet shopping habits of users, plus much more. Hackers may use information stolen from banking account to vary login information to sites like Amazon or PayPal by studying your site content and reviewing your user comments.</p>
<p>Internet websites offer users an incorrect feeling of security promising that storing your own private data remains safe and secure from malicious use. The problem is that hackers target web sites for any information they contain. But once your data have been leaked online, there is absolutely no telling where it finally ends up. Most hacker breaches, just like the recently exposed online payment services plus the Gawker media hacks, show private secured networks are breached very often and they often these breaches are months as the hackers syphon off immeasurable<br />
data about users. More serious over time affects of these hacks are difficult to quantify and find out. But once your data is exposed for the internet no one is able of securing that information again.</p>
<p>Social networking sites provide many beneficial conveniences to interact together with the world and friends. But those benefits contain a cost. We expose ourselves and contacts on the potential for having private information stolen. It will take years, even a lifetime, to counter the ill affects of the possible identity theft caused by social networking hack. Inside your maintain your information safe would be to stop with these sites. To shield your identity and personal information delete your complete online social network accounts and do not subscribe to any new social network services. Not providing myspace your own personal information is the one 100% safe means from getting your personal information stolen.</p>
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		<title>Friendster Login Refused? &#8212; Friendster and Facebook Proxy Options</title>
		<link>http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/friendster-login-refused-friendster-and-facebook-proxy-options/</link>
		<comments>http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/friendster-login-refused-friendster-and-facebook-proxy-options/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Feb 2010 05:54:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Computers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cell Phones]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Government Establishments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Surfing Habits]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.thefriendsterlayouts.com/?p=20</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Peter Nisbet asked: r Facebook or Friendster login has been refused then you will need a Friendster or Facebook proxy to get you into the site. The same is true of MySpace and YouTube. Why is it that so many people are seeking proxies for these social networking sites?Not so long ago, as employers took [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="float:left; padding: 12px"><a href="/wp-content/uploads/cc/friendster8.jpg"><img src="/wp-content/uploads/cc/friendster8.jpg" title='friendster' alt='friendster' /></a></div>
<div><em><strong>Peter Nisbet</strong> asked: </em><br/><br/><br/>r Facebook or Friendster login has been refused then you will need a Friendster or Facebook proxy to get you into the site. The same is true of MySpace and YouTube. Why is it that so many people are seeking proxies for these social networking sites?</P><P>Not so long ago, as employers took on younger people, they also appear to take on their habits. Many young employees believed (still do) that when they start to work for an employer they can take their surfing habits with them. At every opportunity they would use the company computer to access their Friendster account, login to Facebook or find what the latest big video was on YouTube. Obviously, their employers did not like this.</P><P>The result was that employers blocked certain URLs. This wasn&#8217;t difficult because the vast majority of companies use an intranet system, so all they had to do was block the server from accessing these websites. As company networks became more sophisticated it was even possible to identify the computer from which the Friendster login attempt originated.</P><P>Universities and colleges soon followed, and it finally became obvious that private computers, or at least those operated by private concerns such as educational and government establishments, and businesses, were no longer willing to tolerate their staff using their computers or terminals to access social networking sites. Friendster login was refused, and those of other social networking sites.</P><P>This seemed unfair to many, and still does, because such sites are a means of communication just as cell phones are, and many use Twitter for example to send small messages to their friends. So what was the answer?</P><P>Simple when you think of it. The colleges and employers and whoever else blocks the URLs you visit, can only see one deep. So, if you visit a website that is not blocked, your company&#8217;s server won&#8217;t block you. You can log on to that site. Now, take it a step further. If you now use that website to log on to another website, your firm or college&#8217;s spying software can&#8217;t see that. It still thinks you are on the original innocuous website. Nobody except you knows that you are actually logged on to Friendster.</P><P>In basic terms, when it is used to log on to Facebook it is known as a Facebook proxy, and it can also be used as a Friendster login. A search box on another website can be used as a proxy to enable you to access any other website at all. It need not be YouTube, Friendster or, but any URL you want to access.</P><P>The problem with proxy sites is that once they have been used for a period of time, they are found, and that URL is then added to the list of banned sites. &#8220;Banned&#8221; does not mean that you should not access them: it means that you CANNOT access them. They too are blocked from you in the same way that a Friendster login is blocked.</P><P>That is why you need a regular source of proxy sites &#8211; finding one by accident seems great because you can log on to Friendster, and that Facebook proxy is allowing you to contact your buddies from work, but it won&#8217;t last. Once it has been blocked then what do you do?</P><P>Better by far to find a website that offers a free Friendster login or a Facebook proxy that you can rely upon. Such sites will carry out checks on the proxies they offer, and change them when they have been found out. You will always have a tried and tested proxy that works.<BR /></P><br/><br/></div>
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