How to Get More Privacy on Facebook

Over the past week, Facebook has been nudging its users -- first gently, then firmly -- to review and update their privacy settings.

You may have procrastinated by hitting "skip for now," but Facebook eventually took away that button and forced you to update your settings before continuing to use the site.

After finally accepting Facebook's recommendations or tweaking the privacy settings yourself, though, you might have made more information about you public than what you had intended.

At the same time, Facebook has given users many granular controls over their privacy, more than what's available on other major social networks.

So if you want to stay out of people's view, but still want to be on Facebook, here are some things to look out for as you take another look at your settings.

1. Some of your information is viewable by everyone.

Everyone can see your name, your profile photo and the names of work and school networks you're part of. Ditto for pages you are a fan of. If you are worried about a potential employer finding out about a quirky fetish or unorthodox political leaning, avoid becoming a Facebook fan of such groups. You can't tell Facebook you don't want those publicly listed. Your gender and current city are also available, if you choose to specify them. You can uncheck "Show my sex in my profile" when you edit your profile if you don't want it listed, and you can leave "Current City" blank.

2. Your list of friends may also be public.

Facebook also considers your friends list publicly available information. Privacy advocates worry that much can be gleaned from a person's list of friends -- even sexual orientation, according to one MIT study. However, there is a way to hide the list. Go to your profile page and click on the little blue pencil icon on the top right of your box of friends. Uncheck "Show Friend List to everyone." Either way, those you are already friends with can always see your full list.

3. You can hide yourself from Web searches.

There is a section for "Search" under Facebook's privacy settings page, which is accessible from the top right corner of the Web site under "Settings." If you click the "Allow" box next to "Public Search Results," the information that Facebook deems publicly available (such as photo, fan pages and list of friends), along with anything else you have made available to everyone, will show up when someone looks up your name on a search engine such as Google (Nasdaq: GOOG). The stuff you've limited access to in your profile will not show up.

This is useful if you want people you've lost touch with, or potential work contacts, to be able to find your Facebook page. If you'd rather not be found, uncheck this box.

A second setting, controlling searches within Facebook, lets you refine who can find you once that person has logged on. Limit searches to friends only if you think you have all the friends you need and don't want anyone to find you when they type in your name to Facebook.

4. Beware of third-party applications.

Quizzes and games are fun, but each time you take one, you first authorize it to access your profile information, even if you have made that available only to your friends. You're also letting the app access some information on your friends.

Under "Application Settings," Facebook lists all the apps you have opened your profile up to. If you no longer want to authorize access to "Which Golden Girl Are You?" you can always remove it by clicking on the "X" next to its name. Apps you use regularly, such as Facebook for Android if you update your status from your mobile phone, should stay.

Next, by clicking on "Applications and Websites" on the privacy settings page, you can edit whether your friends can share your birthday, photos and other specific information. Remember that applications can access your "publicly available information" no matter what.

The security firm Sophos recommends users set their privacy settings for two of Facebook's own popular applications, notes and photos, to friends only.

5. Go over your list of friends.

The average Facebook user has 130 friends. However, many people interact with a much smaller group when commenting on status updates, photos and links. So it doesn't hurt to occasionally review your list of your friends to get an idea of just who can view your status posts, vacation photos and funny links you've shared over the years. Don't feel obligated to add anyone as a friend, even if that person adds you first. For professional acquaintance you don't want to snub, send them to a LinkedIn profile you can set up. Some workplaces and schools have rules about Facebook interactions between bosses and employees or students and teachers.

6. Create custom friends groups.

If you have friended a lot of people, sort them. Think of the groups you interact with in real life -- coworkers, college buddies, girlfriends, grandma and grandpa -- and organize your Facebook friends in these groups, too. Go to "All Friends" under the "Friends" button up top, click on "Create New List" and fire away. Then decide what aspects of your profile, and which status posts and photos, these people will have access to. Or, simply create a "limited" list for acquaintances or distant relatives and limit their access.

7. Customize your status posts.

Type "I'm hungry" into your status update box. Click on the little lock icon. You'll see a range of privacy controls pop up, letting you either allow or limit access to the post. If you want, you can even hide it from everyone by clicking "Only Me" under the custom settings. Click on "Save Setting." Repeat with each post, or create a default setting for most updates and increase or decrease privacy as you see fit.

8. Let your friends know you have boundaries -- in person.

Many of us have woken up on a Sunday morning to find that an overzealous friend has posted dozens of photos from that wild party we barely remembered -- the good, the bad and the hideous. Chances are, they didn't do this to embarrass you, though if they did you have bigger problems. Rather, they probably don't know that you don't want these photos posted. Sure, tweak your photo privacy settings on Facebook. However, if someone starts snapping pictures of you at a party, ask them to check with you before posting it anywhere.

9. Never assume complete privacy.

Even for the most tech-savvy person, unflattering photos, incriminating text messages or angry status posts about work have a way of worming their way out in the open, just saying.

Courtesy: Associated Press. ECT News Network.

Lionel Messi crowns stunning year by winning FIFA world player of the year


Argentina’s Lionel Messi collected his first FIFA World Player of the Year title while Brazil’s Marta became the first to obtain four FIFA Women’s World Player of the Year awards at the 19th FIFA World Player Gala at the Zurich Kongresshaus on Monday evening.

It was a night to remember, with on-stage appearances by former and current football stars, prominent celebrities and a musical show headlined by Italian pop star Laura Pausini.

Messi had an outstanding 2009, leading his club FC Barcelona to a historic season and collecting the FIFA Club World Cup, the UEFA Champions League and Super Cup crowns and the Spanish Liga, Super Cup and Cup titles along the way.

The 1,073 points he obtained in the vote, participated in by the coaches and captains of 147 national teams, saw him win by a clear margin ahead of Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo in second (352 points) and Spain’s Xavi (196), Brazil’s Kaka (190) and Spain’s Andres Iniesta (134).

The 22-year-old forward, who also landed the European Footballer of the Year prize earlier this month, picked up the accolade after collecting four major titles with Barcelona - the Champions League, the Club World Cup, La Liga and the King's Cup.

"This finishes a magnificent year for Barcelona, my team mates and for me," said Messi after receiving the trophy from UEFA president and former France international Michel Platini.

The Argentine, who joined Barcelona as a 13-year-old in 2000, claimed 1,073 points in a poll of 147 national team coaches and captains.

Portugal and Real Madrid winger Cristiano Ronaldo, last year's winner, was a distant second with 352 points followed by Spain and Barcelona midfielder Xavi (196).

Messi was leading scorer in the 2008-09 Champions League, hitting nine goals including one in the 2-0 final win over Manchester United.

He also notched the extra-time winner in the 2-1 Club World Cup final victory over Estudiantes in Abu Dhabi on Saturday.

Messi's vote appeared to be entirely based on his club form as his performances for Argentina, under coach Diego Maradona, were largely disappointing.

Argentina struggled to qualify for the World Cup and their results this year included a 6-1 hammering in Bolivia and defeats by Paraguay and Ecuador.

Before the ceremony, Messi told reporters he could not explain why he failed to perform at the same level for his country.

"I don't know," he said. "I try to do the same as I do for Barcelona. But the World Cup qualifiers are complicated, sometimes it's difficult to play and it was a big effort for us to qualify.

"I believe the World Cup could be completely different for us ... it could be better for me and Argentina."

Marta thrilled fans in the revamped Women’s Professional Soccer League in the U.S., where she won the Golden Boot and was elected best player of the season with Los Angeles Sol, and also claimed the titles of the women’s Copa Libertadores and Copa de Brasil with Santos. Votes were cast by 130 coaches and captains for the women’s award and Marta won for the fourth consecutive time (833 points), ahead of Germany’s Birgit Prinz (290), England’s Kelly Smith (252), Brazil’s Cristiane (239) and Germany’s Inka Grings (216).


Two new awards were presented at the gala. The FIFA/FIFPro World XI to honour the best eleven players of the year, as chosen by over 50,000 professional players from all over the world, went to a real “dream team” featuring Iker Casillas (Spain) in goal; Daniel Alves (Brazil), Nemanja Vidic (Serbia), John Terry (England) and Patrice Evra (France) in defence; Steven Gerrard (England), Xavi (Spain) and Andres Iniesta (Spain) in midfield; and Lionel Messi (Argentina), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal) and Fernando Torres (Spain) up front.

Also handed out for the first time was the FIFA Puskás Award for the ‘most beautiful goal’ of the year as voted for on FIFA.com by over 120,000 fans.

What is wrong with Tiger Woods? Beyond the Scandal

The aftermath of Tiger Woods scandal hits the industries harder and deeper. Leading brands including Nike and Adidas could cut their multi-million pound endorsements deals for sporting celebrities as a result of the Tiger Woods scandal, according to business analysts.

The adverse publicity from the golfer's serial infidelities has shown that investing vast sums of money in one individual can be "fraught with risk", Credit Suisse said.

In a report entitled "Tiger Woods Fallout: Another Nail in the Coffin of the Expensive Endorsement Era", analyst Omar Saad wrote: "We believe the trend away from high-profile, multi-million dollar celebrity and athlete endorsements has been growing for some time, and 'Tiger-gate' could be an inflection point. Athlete sponsorships can be fraught with risk and simply aren't as valuable as they once were."

Tiger Woods is reportedly struggling to cope with the cheating scandal that has engulfed him and has taken to hitting golf balls in the dark and spending his days eating cereal in front of the TV.

US Weekly magazine says Woods has been visiting a local golf course near his Florida home at night to "clear his head" after therapy sessions with his wife Elin Nordegren.

"He goes after dark so he can't be seen," an unnamed source told the magazine.

"For him, what's more therapeutic than hitting golf balls, the thing he's best at in the whole world?"

While he is busy at night, Woods is going crazy sitting at home all day, the UK's The Sun newspaper reports.

The tabloid claims the golfing superstar is spending the daylight hours hiding out at home, watching cartoons and eating cereal alone.

His friends are becoming concerned about how Woods is dealing with the situation, the newspaper reports.

Woods' friend and former NBA star Charles Barkley said he had been trying without success to get in touch with Woods to show his support.

"I've been trying to get to him and can't ... it's very frustrating," he told The Sun.

Meanwhile, according to reports, Nordegren has hired hot shot divorce lawyer Sorrell Troupe — who has previously represented Nicole Kidman, Britney Spears and Cary Grant — to negotiate the end of her five-year marriage.

Nordegren plans to ask for as much as half of Woods' billion-dollar fortune in light of the dozen mistresses who have been revealed, the reports say.

Ideally, Nordegren will file for divorce in the state of California where the couple own a home and the relaxed divorce laws would give her a greater chance of being awarded a larger chunk of Woods' assets.

Meanwhile, Nike and Adidas are the two brands that determine market prices for sports sponsorship, "We expect the Tiger media fallout to serve as a catalyst for them both to realize that they are systematically overpaying for athlete and team sponsorships, especially given the growing risks involved."

Phil Knight, the chairman of Nike, has pledged his support for Woods, calling his indiscretions a "minor blip".

However, other sponsors have sounded the retreat. Accenture has severed its links with the star, to the extent that staff has been ordered to remove all Woods branded merchandise from its offices worldwide, and Gillette is "evaluating" its relationship with the golfer.

The meltdown in Woods's personal life has seen a dozen women come forward to claim they had affairs with him, and could cost $200 million in lost revenue, according to analysts.

With the sport's biggest draw taking an "indefinite break" from the game, television audiences are expected to halve. When Woods was out with a knee injury in 2008 and early 2009, ratings fell by 47 per cent.

The fall in audience could lead television advertising to drop by 40 per cent, or around $190 million, industry watchers said.

"There will be an audience for the sport after Tiger Woods, they'll just be much smaller because he attracts a casual fan who otherwise may not tune in," said Aaron Cohen, chief media negotiating officer for New York advertising agency Horizon Media.

Nike, which has built its golf equipment business around Woods, stands to lose more than $30 million in sales, according to Claire Gallacher, an analyst with Capstone Investments.