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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)

  • eLJay
    Love rating 76
    eLJay said

    It's about time people started leaving Facebook, but the next great system just isn't there.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  3 loves
  • culluding-fool
    Love rating 49
    culluding-fool said

    I've been receiving so many page timeout errors since about two or three weeks before my timeline started that I've moved over to give google plus a go. I can't really comment yet because I don't have enough friends on google plus to make proper use of it. I did have a load of strangers posting on my wall initially but they were easy to stop. Now it's just silently waiting for any friends willing to step outside facebook.

    I'm at the stage with Facebook that I have had enough. Even if no better social site comes along, I'm not going to check Facebook as regularly as emails any more. One thing I have found interesting since going back to emails is that a lot of my friends on Facebook every day don't seem to check their emails at all. I've had to ask a few friends via SMS to check their email accounts for an email I sent them. Email has always been the first priority for me, I just find it easier to manage.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • jacky007
    Love rating 7
    jacky007 said

    I don't think timeline is an improvement in any way. If it isn't broken, don't mend it!! Please facebook, at least let us have the choice of timeline or the ORIGINAL.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  7 loves
  • shortchanged
    Love rating 17
    shortchanged said

    I absolutely loathe the timeline. It is actually harder to follow anything as you have a multitude of columns and boxes to look through. If you are on a forum page you have to select to see the posts which then comes up in a separate box - If you follow one to look at, when you go back you have lost your position and have to scroll through pages to find where you were. It gives me a real headache looking at it. It is ugly, impractical and total rubbish as far as I am concerned and it should have been left as it was. Now everything is a glorious mess.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  4 loves
  • brcoombs
    Love rating 3
    brcoombs said

    I don't like timeline at all. I am considering leaving facebook altogether. Perhaps tagged would be a better alternative. I will check this out.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  3 loves
  • EastExpert
    Love rating 30
    EastExpert said

    I for one like the new timeline. With proper control in place you won't divulge too much to strangers, but your friends will have an idea of what are you up to.

    Also things like "bought the car", "got a dog", "got married", "moved to another address" - you can make them private even, so no one else sees them -- but you always can recall these dates and remember something you'd like.

    I guess some people are very conservative so they loathe any change that comes their way. Be it Facebook profile or new version of Windows. Thank God there are enough people who like change, so the world hasn't become too boring a place.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    None of my friends and business colleagues are boring enough to be on Facebook. We all have a real life.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  7 loves
  • Ken Rich
    Love rating 15
    Ken Rich said

    Thank heaven for electric blue. I thought that I was the only one who considered that face book and twittering was a complete waste of a sensible person's time.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  7 loves
  • Iamcoldsteve
    Love rating 311
    Iamcoldsteve said

    I have a facebook account that rarely gets any activity from me. I infrequently provide status updates and everything is controlled in a way that unless you are my friend, you won't see anything. Not even a picture of me (my profile pic is of a particular bridge!).

    You won't see my friends, any photos or groups or anything. I don't have ANY applications and I have restricted my personal information requested from friends apps, etc.

    I am not sure about timeline. I don't have it, but some of my friends do. I haven't navigated around it for long enough yet.

    What is the actual point of facebook? Is it to tell everyone your every move (i've just been to the kitchen for a drink, etc) or is it to share important things with friends, etc?

    My friends on Facebook are my friends in the real world, but we find it useful to share pictures, event etc.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • lauradean
    Love rating 13
    lauradean said

    Humm, a website that allows you to comment about things on which you have an opinion and react to other people's comments - what does that remind me of?! (Granted about a specific subject)

    Facebook is a useful tool if used correctly, to keep in touch with friends who live far away, to share certain info and pictures for example One can use it as much or as little as one wants to. Why anyone wouldn't have their privacy settings set high I can't imagine, I want to share things with my friends and family, no one else.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  5 loves
  • elaineb64
    Love rating 6
    elaineb64 said

    As Culluding-fool above stated, I too have friends who don't check their e-mail frequently so for that reason I will stick a post on their Facebook and more often than not have a response within minutes! I also have a 'real' life just like the two posters above, however, Facebook is a handy tool to have as an additional means of communication so don't knock it til you've tried it I say.

    Not too impressed with the timeline though - I prefer the old style layout which was much easier to navigate.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  4 loves
  • legacyman
    Love rating 3
    legacyman said

    Having just heard that FB is going to make everyone migrate to their new timeline really annoys me. Surely we are what makes FB work and in my book, you always listen to your customers. Not Mr Z & his FB cronies. They seem to make capricious decisions about their product and then foist it onto us, with no consultation, little warning and a really crappy help system.

    FB always seems to be trying to do too much, therefore it is always morphing into something new. I find the timeline cluttered, confusing and not easy to navigate. (I just want to say, I am a social media surgeon, who trains people in using social media, so I know a good social media platform when I see one!) Believe me, the FB timeline isn't something I would recommend to people.

    I'm glad that Google +, Twitter & Pinterest are creeping up on FB. I just hope FB goes the same way as MySpace before too long... Grrrr!

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  3 loves
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    Just use lists on Timeline:

    'This list gives you an easy and private way to limit what you share with someone—without blocking or unfriending them. They won't see the list name or be told they're listed.'

    I have lots of friends on Facebook, many of them authors doing promotions and they don't have a problem. Facebook is used by my local library, university, council, museum, art gallery, the Monarch and even Lovemoney!

    Get used to it...

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • fenemore
    Love rating 205
    fenemore said

    I am so relieved to know that there are others who think that social networking is a complete waste of time and human endeavour. Just why do people feel the need to share their sad lives with others? It seems to be the modern way of boring others to death with your holiday snaps!

    As for exposing yourself to risk as outlined in this article - I have absolutely no sympathy whatsoever. You put personal stuff on line, then you should expect it!

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • johnmxn3
    Love rating 17
    johnmxn3 said

    To Mike10613.

    As I understand it, you will have to use Timeline from next January, no more lists.

    I don't use Face Book although I keep getting pestered by friends to do so. My life is of little interest to others anyway, and that is how I want to keep it.

    It does annoy me that when wanting to respond to some blogs or comments on Yahoo, I am supposed to register with FB. No thanks, I have even more of a life not getting wound up as I no longer read the blogs or comments. Too many "Trolls" with sick minds on there anyway.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • DaveB60
    Love rating 6
    DaveB60 said

    So fraudsters want to know my history. Well bully for them.

    I'm afraid it won't help them.

    My Mother's maiden name is, erm, 97 Valley Park Road.

    My first school is, erm, Mrs Fotheringhay.

    These are not the real data given to banks, etc.

    In fact, every time I give this information to a new organisation, I choose different and more random answers.

    And I keep a note of what I've told them: in code of course.

    So, if they do find my mother's maiden name, what good is that to them?

    The banks and other institutions haven't got that information, so the knowledge is useless.

    Hey, why be sane when you can be crazy and get away with it!

    By the way, my mother's maiden name was ............. Nah! You don't need to know.

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • leah AKA global leah
    Love rating 21
    leah AKA global leah said

    It amused me to read some of the posts above, saying that they don't use Facebook because they have a life. But yet, they NEVER fail to post a comment on each of these articles.

    I dare say as well as a few on here, we HAVE a life, but not enough money to be sociable every week. I use Facebook to pass time when there is nothing on television to play games, interact with friends and families that lives in other countries, it a damn sight cheaper than ringing them every two minutes! AND yes, I also check my emails every day. I will be honest, rarely I read articles from lovemoney if it doesn't catch my attention or relevant to me, and if I feel I should have my two pence worth, then I'll post a comment.

    I used to go to chat rooms when I DIDN'T have a life, made a lot of friends, and 10+ years on, I am still in contact with them, mostly via on Facebook, but I also chat to them on the phone, and even occasionally meet up for a drink.

    The timeline doesn't bother me, as I do only put down what's relevant for my friends and families to see, as 95% of my families lives in Hong Kong, Philipines, Jamaica and Canada, it's a lot easier to interact with them on Facebook than via emails.

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Luniversal
    Love rating 47
    Luniversal said

    'Social media' are for mendacious braggarts, frustrated novelists, agoraphobes and groomers.

    That is all.

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    @leah AKA global leah

    Facebook is relevant to me, (not that I need anyone else's permission to post comments), because every day I am bombarded with emails from marketing companies telling me that my company does not appear on Social Media and telling me that I'm missing potential customers.

    Not very bright if you can't see the distinction between a relatively anonymous blogging and a constant updating of your triviality on a Social Media web site with every detail of your boring, sad, life? So Facebook is now for people too poor to interact socially in person? There is no comparison whatsoever between the old chat rooms and what happens with Facebook. Your personal use appears to be very similar to the old chat room relationships and it is a good use for Social Media, but not the use which makes it popular and has teenagers updating their every meaningless move throughout the day. Teenagers on Facebook do not forge new relationships with others across the world and use it for meaningful discourse on the parallels of their lives.

    I turned my use of the internet into an extension of my business experience and have travelled the world for the last 18 years. I write technical copy in American English for my company and regard myself as 'bilingual' between USA and UK use of English. I'm in Las Vegas next week (on business) but why would I need my distant cousins in Australia to know that?

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • Bernard Ric
    Love rating 0
    Bernard Ric said

    To the Facebook knockers - you know what - nobody forces anyone to use it.

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • SuBo
    Love rating 2
    SuBo said

    Thanks to you, Facebook got my money back from Ebay/Paypal after very unfair treatment when I bought a Kindle from them which had been stolen, and therefore useless, as Amazon wouldn't register it! One post, which I repeated a few times as they kept deleting it, and within about a week I got my money back! So I am grateful both to you and Facebook!!

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • cyberbabe
    Love rating 0
    cyberbabe said

    Why would anyone post their bank on Facebook?

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • FireBlade
    Love rating 25
    FireBlade said

    It's sad that freedom of choice is removed by bullying entities like facebook who force you to have the version that they dictate.

    Report on 19 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • leah AKA global leah
    Love rating 21
    leah AKA global leah said

    @electricblue

    I actually DON'T post where I am or what I'm doing like some of the people that uses facebook... my family that I talk on a REGULAR basis live abroad, and I do it on a one to one, not for the whole World to see/read...

    We aren't all that fortunate to have a job/business that take us all over the World, and at 11pm onwards, I doubt very much anybody in the right mind would go out anyway.

    Also, I admitted that I didn't have a life before, single mother with no jobs and didn't have the help that the government offers now, so the internet was the only near outside life that I had. Nowadays I do go visiting my friends and go out, just not on a regular basis because some of us don't live beyond our means...

    As for the "younger generation".. my niece happens to be quite outgoing, and she's under 16, also on facebook and she does put meaningless things on.. but hey, sometimes even us adults talk rubbish, and the only difference is we don't put it to the public that's all..

    All in all, Facebook has settings that you can do yourself if you don't want anybody else to see it..

    Report on 20 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • teafoo
    Love rating 47
    teafoo said

    Please explain WHY it is that so many people are eager to display their lives to so many people who don't know them, while so few people are actually interested in anything except their own postings -

    Look at any day on FB and there is nothing as banal and ordinary to be found anywhere else.

    It is only of interest to the person who posts and perhaps 2 or 3 other close friends.

    If you don't like it, don't use it.

    Report on 20 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    I find it strange that this subject provoked 25 comments. I just posted Happy Birthday to a published author I know in Canada on Facebook. It's cheaper than sending everyone cards and quicker. There have been about 4 birthdays this week and with the price of stamps going to obscene levels this is a quite a frugal thing to do. Not everyone can fly around the world like electricblue to visit people in person. I'm not in favour of travelling too much, I'm a little worried about climate change and the legacy we leave for future generations.

    I also use LinkedIn, Windows Live instant messenger and other internet communications. I used computer communications about 50 years ago and so welcomed the widespread use of global communications systems. Social media is just another communications system that has to be used sensibly. You don't give your phone number to every Tom, Dick and Harry and so be sensible with information on Facebook, Google +, LinkedIn, Twitter and the rest.

    My friend is writing the third novel in a trilogy and social media has been useful for him to promote the first two books. A professor in electricblue's beloved California teaches social media and required her students to join Facebook, LinkedIn and write Wordpress blogs. It's serious business with Facebook likely to be valued at $100 million after an IPO. Only the narrow minded with ignore it or criticise what they don't understand unduly.

    Don't you think that it's a shame there is no British social media of any standing but lots of American ones and even China has a lot like QQ.com, Renren and so on. Britain with it's backwards thinking, socially divided society is getting rarer pathetic and unable to innovate; so buy up stamps now before the price goes up; you might need them.

    Report on 20 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    @Mike

    The sex toy industry is worth hundreds of billions, since when did the financial worth of an industry justify it's standing in the development of humanity?

    The UK is in the top five INNOVATIVE nations in the world. Production is another thing, but we don't do half bad. Global communication and the merits thereof is not the issue and certainly not related to the debate on the rise of social media. One of our associates in California uses our facility to further his research into rocket engine nozzles (he's already won a $1M dollar prize) and we deal with engineers at the highest level all around the world using every modern communication method we can. It tickles me still that for £10 a month I have an incoming California number on my O2 phone. I only fly on business and actually have NEVER flown anywhere on holiday, so I'll justify my carbon footprint with two or three trips to the USA a year and a few to trade shows in Europe against the brainless idiots on weekly booze flights any time. I holiday in the UK, it's a great country.

    The scientists, inventors and even those of us just developing and inventing products on a daily basis have better things to do with their lives than post on Social Media and issue press releases every time we develop something special. Clearly, Mike, you must only communicate with backward thinking people or you would not have such a skewed idea of this great country we live in. Britain was slow developing Social Media? So what! - we invented the internet.

    Report on 20 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Dampflok
    Love rating 22
    Dampflok said

    I think the new Time Line is an abomination. I have now removed ALL my personal details, bar my name, from Facebook. (There wasn't much there anyway.) I won't give up on Facebook though as it is very useful for me.

    Report on 20 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    @electricblue, I was one of the first people to use the internet when I worked for the government. I still use it. Facebook might not have the kudos of LinkedIn, but it's useful and not everyone posts the mundane stuff. I mentioned a few artists in one of my blogs a while ago, two were famous and one just starting out. One of the famous ones asked to be my 'friend' on Facebook over the weekend and I'm pleased to communicate occasionally with someone so talented. It also helped me get a few readers for my new website, who are interested in art.

    In Britain we have a socially divided society and it gets worse. I communicate with people around the world and I don't care about race, social standing or anything else. I know royalty, aristocrats and Americans on food stamps; I tend to treat them all the same.

    Just use Facebook sensibly and see it for what it is, a useful promotional and communications tool. There are others. Many of my friends were concerned about copyright issues with Pinterest and saying they wouldn't use that; but now see how useful it can be. People are promoting products and services using PInterest and making a few dollars. The British will be slow to catch on yet again...

    Report on 23 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • gecko2
    Love rating 0
    gecko2 said

    I deleted my account over a year ago and don't miss it one bit. I joined when it was first launched and got sick of the amount of adverts, rubbish games and spam associated with the site. I never liked how they were using people's data. The sooner facebook disappears the better.

    Report on 23 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • coloratura
    Love rating 61
    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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