Stan Beer
Thursday, 18 October 2007 09:56
Your IT -
Home IT
Facebook has agreed to better promote its security settings and to take greater actions to protect children online, following a safety probe by the New York attorney general's office which caught the social networking site napping.
Investigators set up fake Facebook profiles posing as teenagers and
received sexually suggestive messages from adults within days. The
investigators then notified Facebook through its website, but these
complaints went unanswered for weeks. Facebook has now agreed to post
sterner and more obvious warnings about how users can control and set
their security settings to reduce the dangers to children and others
using its site. It has also pledged to deal with any complaints within
24 hours.
Security firm Sophos experts note that, while Facebook's privacy and
security features are far more sophisticated than competing social
network sites, it is still almost impossible to police the site and
check that users really are who they say they are. Furthermore, many
users continue to unwittingly expose their personal details to millions
of strangers online, potentially putting themselves at risk of online
sexual abuse.
Recent research from Sophos revealed that 75% of users in the London
network, the largest on Facebook with more than 1.2 million members,
allowed their profile to be viewed by any other member. In light of
this research and the findings of New York state, Sophos is urging
Facebook to rethink its default privacy settings.
"With more than 70 million active users on Facebook - many of whom
won't have thought to change their privacy settings and to limit which
other members can access their personal information - it's no surprise
that sexual predators are using these sites as a way to lure innocent
victims," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos.
"Social networking sites provide these criminals with the anonymity
they need to trick children and that's why it's so important that the
companies themselves take steps to protect members and educate them
about the dangers of joining networks and making friends with complete
strangers. You wouldn't invite someone you don't know into your home
and nor should you let them view your online profile."
In August, Sophos published research showing that 41% of Facebook users
were prepared to divulge personal information to a complete stranger (a
small plastic frog called Freddi Staur - an anagram of 'ID Fraudster').
For a screenshot of Freddi Staur’s Facebook page, click
here .