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Facebook Timeline poses new dangers

ReenaSewraz
by Lovemoney Staff ReenaSewraz on 18 April 2012  |  Comments 32 comments

As we're encouraged to divulge more of our personal information online, do we risk giving identity thieves a helping hand?

Facebook Timeline poses new dangers

Facebook has gone through several facelifts over the years but the latest revamp of the social network has raised concerns about our internet security. Facebook Timeline debuted in 2011 and features a new format that makes our archived data easier to view.

While many users hate the new Timeline, Facebook said in January that the format would become mandatory and soon all users will have to comply.

So with this push to put our whole story out there for all to see, can we be sure we are still playing it safe online?

What is Facebook Timeline?

The Facebook Timeline format features a new look wall that is arranged in reverse-chronological order. It groups events into months along a timeline of years. It's intended to provide a practical way to view your older activity on the site in an attractive scrapbook layout.

Timeline also works in conjunction with apps. So every time you listen to a track on Spotify or read an article on The Guardian website, it is recorded and shown on your profile.

So it’s great for putting your life into context and uploading funny pictures of when you were four and had a bowl haircut, but not so great for keeping the past in the past and personal information hidden.

Risks

As well as the usual status updates, photos and friendships, this new format also offers the option to fill in missing bits of your life on your timeline.

So if you only got a Facebook account when you were 18, you are now able to fill in the blanks from your birth or as Mark Zuckerberg puts it: 'Tell the whole story of your life on a single page'.  

While this is charming and offers friends and family a comprehensive picture of you and your life, it also puts people at a heightened risk to identity theft.

New measures

Experts say we need to review how we operate online as the development of Facebook Timeline provides a much richer vein of personal data, so for a user not paying attention to how Facebook treats information, there is a heightened risk of identity theft.

Credit reference agencies like Experian think that the key is to be careful about what you publish on your social networks and, vitally, limiting who can see it.

Information such as your school, place of work, bank, birthday and your family members, all provide useful pieces of your identity jigsaw to thieves. Clever crooks will know how to arrange these seemingly random facts together to unlock money in your name.

If you haven’t already switched over, Facebook will give you a seven day warning where you will be able to make the necessary adjustments to keep your information safe and any embarrassing events of the past hidden.

Why not take some time out to go through all your online profiles to check that there is no information on there that could help fraudsters.

For more on how to avoid getting caught out on social media sites, check out Why Facebook means your bills will rise and How your Facebook profile could get you the sack.

lovemoney top tips for staying safe online with Facebook Timeline:

- Be proactive. If you are not a big Facebook user but like to have one anyway make sure you make the changes before Facebook does it for you

- Hide or delete any old posts that are too revealing or you would rather forget!

- Change the permissions on old photos and posts to limit the audience

- Make sure that on newer updates you choose ‘Friends’ on the audience selector

- Check what your public timeline looks like and if it is revealing too much go in and change some more of the settings

- Make sure you choose an appropriate cover photo. This is not private and will appear in searches

So what do you think about the new timeline? Love it or loathe it? And are you worried about privacy issues? Let us know in the comment box below.

More on social media:

Could Facebook kill free banking? 

How Facebook can make and save you money

Watch out for these social networking scams

10000 Twitter passwords hacked into

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Comments (32)

  • coloratura
    Love rating 62
    coloratura said

    Mike10613 - Just to let you know that celebrities do have a secretary who looks over all the Facebook comments, invites "friends" etc (Olly Murrs secretary appeared on a recent "Deal or No Deal" programme). This is to be expected of course as celebrities are usually busy being celebrities e.g. rehearsing and writing material in the case of musicians, on tour or doing interviews for newsapapers. This doesn't mean the celebrity concerned is not interested or never gets to hear about anything but most people don't get a direct contact with a celebrity. I hope that this doesn't "burst your bubble" but that is the reality of a celebrity life.

    Report on 23 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • DeeTee
    Love rating 2
    DeeTee said

    I think that Mike makes a good point with regards not giving you information to everybody, and this article highlights that changes to Facebook may mean that you are revealing more information than you realise.

    As with all aspects of your life, whether you choose to share your daily activities through social networking or not, always be sure to keep private those details which are relevant to security.

    Im not sure how the posts got so involved in the personalities of those who use social media or how great the contribution of sex toy companies are to the development of human race, but these are just new forms of communication. Just like the press, telephones, the postal system and semaphore. We always have to think before we speak / type / signal - what we are releasing and to whom.

    Report on 24 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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