On Sep 21, 2012, at 11:16 PM, Kevin Callahan <[email protected]> wrote:
> If you accept an invitation to view a photo in a shared Photo Stream, you are
> sent an email, after you have accepted the option to view the photo, asking
> to join the shared Photo Stream. This seems redundant, if not awkward, since
> you already accepted the photo. The tendency is to click JOIN.
>
> The troubling part is that in the email, it states:
>
> "People using this shared Photo Stream will see your Apple ID"
>
> What the hell? Why should your Apple ID be exposed to others receiving a
> shared photo? Shouldn't this be an opt-in? I don't know who else is being
> invited, and I certainly don't want them to know my Apple ID.
>
> This sounds like something Facebook would do... Total bullshit.
Controlling what information you share with applications
When you connect with a game, application or website - such as by going to a
game, logging in to a website using your Facebook account, or adding an app to
your timeline - we give the game, application, or website (sometimes referred
to as just "Applications" or "Apps") your basic info, which includes your User
ID, as well your friends' User IDs (or your friend list) and your public
information.
http://www.facebook.com/full_data_use_policy
>
>
>
>
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