
FaceBook Privacy
Everyday we receive an email from somebody about how their account was hacked, how a friend tagged them in the
photo and they want a way to avoid it, as well as a number of other complications related to their privacy on
Facebook or their computer.
Over the weekend one individual contacted me to let me know that he would be removing me as a friend from
Facebook because he was “going to make a shift with my Facebook use - going to just mostly family stuff.”
Perhaps he was tired of receiving my status updates or perhaps he didn’t want me to view photos from his
personal life. Whatever the reason for ending our Facebook friendship, I figured that many people would benefit
from a thorough overview on how to protect your privacy on Facebook. Below is a step by step process for protecting
your privacy.
1. Use Your Friend Lists I can’t tell you how many people are not aware of their friend
lists. For those not aware of what friend lists are, Facebook describes them as a feature which allows “you to
create private groupings of friends based on your personal preferences. For example, you can create a Friend List
for your friends that meet for weekly book club meetings. You can create Friend Lists for all of your
organizational needs, allowing you to quickly view friends by type and send messages to your lists.”
There are a few very important things to remember about friend lists:
- You can add each friend to more than one friend group
- Friend groups should be used like “tags” as used elsewhere around the web
- Friend Lists can have specific privacy policies applied to them
We will touch on each of the things listed above in more detail later. A typical setup for groups would be
“Friends”, “Family”, and “Professional”. These three groups can then be used to apply different privacy policies.
For example, you may want your friends to see photos from the party you were at last night, but you don’t want your
family or professional contacts to see those photos.
Using friend lists is also extremely useful for organizing your friends if you have a lot of them. For instance
I have about 20 friend lists and I categorize people by city (New York, San Francisco, D.C., Tel Aviv, etc), where
I met them (conferences, past co-workers, through this blog), and my relationship with them (professional, family,
social, etc).
You can configure your friend lists by visiting the friends area of your Facebook.
My mom is a teacher and one of the first things she asked me when she joined Facebook is how she could make sure
her students couldn’t see that she was on the site.
Understandably my mom doesn’t want her middle school students to know what she’s up to in her personal life.
There are numerous reasons that individuals don’t want their information to show up in search results on Facebook,
and it’s simple to turn off your public visibility.
How to Remove Yourself From Facebook Search Results Now that you’ve decided that you would
like to remove yourself from Facebook’s search results, here’s how to do it:
1.Visit your search privacy settings page
2.Under “Search Visibility” select “Only Friends” (Remember, doing so will remove you from Facebook search results,
so make sure you want to be removed totally. Otherwise, you can select another group, such as “My Networks and
Friends” which I believe is the default.)
3.Click “Save Changes”
By default, Facebook makes your presence visible to the network you are in. Frequently, people aren’t aware of
their visibility, so this is one of the first settings that users wish to modify. By selecting “Customize” from the
search visibility drop down you can make your settings even more granular.
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