Tour à tour, Google, Yahoo et Facebook viennent de montrer des signes inquiétants de mépris de la confidentialité des données.
- Didier Lahely
from Bookmarklet
personne vous obblige à utiliser google, facebook etc etc, si on tient à sa privacy on peut utiliser autre chose, non? (spoiler je suis pas français donc fautes d'ortographe sorry)
- alex
Yes, we can! (huh? remind me something...). I know, we can switch off the pc. Going out, in the garden watching the flowers grows everyday in the rising sun. We can surf anonymously, we can ignore the problem, we can use Lycos/Altavista/bing or whatever search engine. But at the same time when the net is a large part of your job for searching, hunting, resources, well, you are tempting...
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- Didier Lahely
metro (c'est bien le journal gratuit dans le metro?) c'est pas ma bible, et il fait un discours simpliste et alarmiste or ses lecteurs n'ont rien à cirer de la privacy. Mettre peur aux gens ne servent, selon moi, à rien. Le pub contre l'alcolisme, la drogue, le racisme n'ont pas des resultat, seul un long travail d'éducation peuvent amener à des resultas. my 2 cents ;)
- alex
http://www.ft.com/cms... > Facebook privacy dispute intensifies By David Gelles in San Francisco Published: December 18 2009 00:23 | Last updated: December 18 2009 00:23 The row over Facebook’s recent changes to its privacy settings intensified on Thursday, as a major privacy organisation filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission...
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- Didier Lahely
Facebook privacy dispute intensifies By David Gelles in San Francisco Published: December 18 2009 00:23 | Last updated: December 18 2009 00:23 The row over Facebook’s recent changes to its privacy settings intensified on Thursday, as a major privacy organisation filed a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission calling on the US agency to open an investigation into the social networking company. The complaint, by the Electronic Privacy Information Center, comes a week after the world’s largest social network made changes that encourage its members to share more information with everyone on the internet, drawing criticism from privacy groups and users.
- Didier Lahely
from Bookmarklet
MediaAsia: Nice big story to end the year on - Ogilvy PR names new Asia-Pacific boss to replace Chris Graves. http://www.media.asia/newsart...
On one afternoon (4th December 2009) more than 140 interviews were conducted by 16 French Doctoral School representatives for 64 HK students. An event co-organized by the Consulate General and CampusFrance for the very first time in Hong Kong.