> Comforting to know it's not a browser exploit digging into > our hard drives, but it raises a question of the security > decision-making at Yahoo, gMail, etc.: > > How can a web site like FaceBook dig into your address book > at those other sites without requiring your passwords for those sites? > > Do Yahoo, Google, etc. just give free access to FaceBook and > potentially anyone else willing to pony up whatever those > mail companies ask for such access?
I believe at some point, you are asked if you want to "find your friends" on various e-services. I recall something about this, also other platforms using something similar, like NING. They've all set up sharing APIs that require permission to be granted. Once it sucks in your data though - its in their system and likely not removable. There are more and more "validation" methods being used across apps. If you have a Wordpress based blog for example, there's a plugin that lets you utilize Facebook Connect for validating commenters. It is very easy to set up. You've ceded access control though. I think this all boils down to the problem, esp in the USA, that you do not "own" your own information. Ive met reps from many Web 2.0 type companies that openly tell me that its all about owning the customer information, and giving away use of all sorts of great applications is targeted towards acquiring this information for ongoing exploitation - targeted ads, direct mail marketing and the like. Best regards, Lynn Fredricks President Paradigma Software http://www.paradigmasoft.com Valentina SQL Server: The Ultra-fast, Royalty Free Database Server _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
