Hi all, I just read this article about Facebook's recent change to messages: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2022925/facebooks-1-message-test-opens-inboxes-to-strangers.html
The gist is that you can pay a dollar to make sure your message is delivered: "In the test, users can pay $1 to make sure their messages land in the Inbox, rather than the Other section. Facebook thinks this could be the best way to deliver important messages from non-friends while keeping spam out of the Inbox." I was wondering whether anyone else thinks this change could be a violation of Facebook's FTC settlement? I am not a lawyer, but I know several policy wonks are on here, so I thought I'd seek a second opinion. Recall that according to their 2011 settlement, Facebook is "required to obtain consumers' affirmative express consent before enacting changes that override their privacy preferences" (http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2011/11/privacysettlement.shtm) Facebook's previous privacy interface allowed users to specify who could send them messages. For example, a user could have specified that only their friends could message them. The new interface offers two options: 1.) Basic Filtering: "Mostly just friends and people you know" 2.) Strict Filtering: "Mostly just friends - you may miss messages from other people you know" (Screenshot: http://imgur.com/EZSBq) If a user, prior to this change, had made their settings such that only friends could message them, this change makes it such that ANYONE (including strangers) to pay to message them. Couldn't this be construed as enacting changes that override privacy preferences without affirmative express consent, and thus a violation of the 2011 settlement? -- Greg Norcie ([email protected]) GPG key: 0x1B873635 -- Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password at: https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
