
Full Disclosure mailing list archives
Re: Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction
From: Źmicier Januszkiewicz <gauri () tut by>
Date: Wed, 2 Apr 2014 09:21:55 +0200
the facebook user should not have unrealistic expectation to privacy.
I think this part says it all. I'd even drop the "unrealistic" out of it. Keeping someone "private" on FB is like spraying it over a wall and hoping nobody will notice, while a certain person is already running an exhibition business out of it. The whole concept of "online privacy" is a delusion IMO. How can something be private if it leaves traces and records all over the place? Traffic, logs, DB records... So please, please let's stop thinking that something can be "private" when we share it with a multibillion company and its partners, advertisers, developers, and whoever makes a legal claim. If you want something to be private -- don't share it. Period. Cheers, Z. _______________________________________________ Sent through the Full Disclosure mailing list http://nmap.org/mailman/listinfo/fulldisclosure Web Archives & RSS: http://seclists.org/fulldisclosure/
Current thread:
- Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction Bipin Gautam (Apr 01)
- Re: Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction Mario Vilas (Apr 01)
- Re: Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction Źmicier Januszkiewicz (Apr 02)
- Re: Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction illwill (Apr 03)
- <Possible follow-ups>
- Re: Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction Philip Whitehouse (Apr 01)
- Re: Access anyone's Facebook "profile picture" in full resolution regardless of the ACL restriction Philip Whitehouse (Apr 01)
(Thread continues...)