Web User - UK (2019-06-12)

(Antfer) #1
What not to share online

Discuss online sharing must-notsatwww.facebook.com/webusermagazine 12 - 25 June 201 9 47

YOURHOME
ADDRESS
Obviously, family members
andclose friends knowwhere you live,
but revealing your home addresson a
public forumsuch as Facebook, Twitter
or Instagram leaves you open to
stalkers, scammers, burglars, trolls and
othertroublemakers. You may not even
realiseyou’re disclosing the information



  • perhaps in a picture of your house in
    which the numberis clearly visi bleor a
    geo-tagged photo posted fromyour
    abode.It doesn’t take much effort for
    an online snooper to look upyour
    address on Google Street View, so they
    can see exactly where you live and get
    directions to your doorstep.
    You can remove geotagging data
    fromimagesyou upload fromyour
    Androidphone or tablet by opening the
    camera app, going into Settings and
    switching off the option ‘Store location
    data’, ‘Savelocation’, ‘Allowlocation
    access’ or similar. Onan iPhoneor iPad,
    go to Settings, Privacy, Location
    Services, Camera andtap Never.


YOURPHONE
NUMBER
With ‘robocalls’ (automated
messagesfromtelemarketing
companies) an increasing menace, it’s
essential to keep your phone number
off the web, but that’s easier said than
done. Facebook requires your number
to enable two-factor authentication,
andthis isthen linked with your profile,
which means people can “lookyou up”.
Even if you don’t tell Facebook your
phone number, it may still be added
when your friends share their contacts
with the social network. To protect your
privacy, first click About on your
Facebook profile page, then hover over
your phone numberin the ‘Contact &
basic info section’ andclick Edit. Here
you can decide exactly who can see


your phone numberor remove it
altogether. Next, go into your account
settings (www.facebook.com/settings),
click Privacy and changethe setting
‘Who can look you up using the phone
numberyou provided’ fromEveryone
to Friends.

YOURDATE
OFBIRTH
Weall like receiving birthday
messages, especially frompeoplewe
don’t hearfromvery often, but there’s
no needto provide your date of birth on
your social-media profile all year round.
This has got nothing to do with nosy
parkers knowing how old you are and
everythingto do with identity theft.
Anyone can use the combination of your
real name andyour real birthdate to
pretendto be you andgain access to all
manner of your private information.
Keep the year of your birth secret, and
preferably the day as well, at least until
your birthday approaches. To hide this
info on Facebook, go to your profile
page, click About and, under Basic
Information, hover your mouse over
‘Year of birth’. Click the privacysymbol,
choose ‘Only me’ fromthe drop-down

menu(or Customto let specific friends
see this detail) andclick Save Changes.

UNAUTHORISED
VIDEOS
It’s not illegal to upload a
videoto the web without the consent of
the people who appearin it, unlessthe
clip containsobscenecontent or is
intended to cause distress (such as with
‘revenge porn’ – see the Ask the Police
article atbit.ly/police477). However,
froman ethical point of view, publicly
sharing apersonal videoof someone
without asking their permission is pretty
dubious, especially if they can be easily
identifiedand are likely to be
embarrassed.

YouTube offers a tool that
automatically detects faces in videos
andlets you blurpeoplewho might not
want to be recognised –click Edit
Video, Editor, AddBlur andchoose the
faces to conceal. But if you’re in any
doubt, don’t share the videountil you
obtain the subjects’ consent – especially
if the footage featuresanyone under the
age of 18.

Posting a selfie in which you make
a peac e sign or a show the palm of
your handmight not seem like risky
behaviour, but it could actually
compromise the security of your
phone. Many handsets now use
fing erpr int recognition to verify who
you are, so you can unlock them with
a single touch, and crimin als can
potentially steal this biometric
information fromyour pictures.
Rese archers in Japanfound that,
if the focus and lighti ng were right,
they could recreate fing erpr ints from
imagesshot up to 10 feet away from
the subject (bit.ly/finger477).
Although someone would have to
go to a lot of trouble to turn that
fing erpr int into a mouldand
physically get hold of your
phone to bypass its security,
it’s still a scary thought.
Pictu res of fing erpr ints canalso

HIDEYOUR FINGERPRINTS ONLINE

prove incrimin ating, even without
a face in shot. Last year, South Wales
Police were able to identify and
convict a drug dealer froma close-up
WhatsA pp photo of him holding
some ecst asy tablets in hispalm
and said the case had “openedthe
floodgates” for using similar
techniques in future
(bit.ly/han d477).
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