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Privacy concerns with social networking services is a subset of data privacy, involving the right of mandating personal privacy concerning storing, re-purposing, provision to third parties, and displaying of information pertaining to oneself via the Internet.
2. Group Members
Nur E Nahian 151-15-245
Kumol Bhowmik 151-15-254
Jayed Al Hasan 151-15-194
Pritom Chaki 151-15-453
3. What is 'Social Media'
Social media is a computer-
based technology that
facilitates the sharing of ideas
and information and the
building of virtual networks
and communities.
4. Common Features of Social Media
• The pace of change in social media and its uses means that its definition
can be a moving target. Generally, however, all social media shares the
following characteristics:
• It is interactive and Web 2.0 based.
• Features user-generated profiles.
• Content is generated by users. This includes photos, videos, conversations,
comments, etc.
• Connections between users are facilitated by the platform.
5. Examples and Usage of Social Media
•Facebook (2.167 billion users as of January 2018)
•YouTube (1.5B)
•WhatsApp (1.3B)
•Facebook Messenger (1.3B)
•WeChat (980M)
•Twitter (330M)
•Skype (300M)
•LinkedIn (260M)
•Viber (260M)
•
6. Social Media Criticism
• Overuse of social media has been likened to addiction and
contributes to inattentiveness, stress and jealousy.
• Heavy social media use has been linked to depression.
• Social media as a conduit for misleading information and falsehoods
has been well documented, such as in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election.
• Such a phenomenon leverages the power of social media,
allowing anyone to reach an audience of millions with content
that lacks oversight or fact checking.
9. What is privacy?
• An individual’s control of their
own virtual personal space by,
• Limiting when, where and how
organizations can collect, make
use of, or share personal data,
• Without the permission of the
individuals involved.
10. Why Privacy?
Because
Information = Power
Our society views
individuals as the most
important rights holders in
most situations (this isn’t
common to all societies).
11. Privacy has grey edges
• Each individual has different privacy tolerances.
• The right and expectation to privacy varies on the situation and the
parties involved.
12. Privacy is constantly changing
•More personal data is captured and stored every day.
• Globalization brings different privacy regimes into conflict.
• Digital channels challenge rights to privacy.
• Evidence of a generational shift in privacy views.
13. To Minimize Privacy Risks
• Understand the National Privacy Principles (NPPs), particularly relating to
‘practicable’ and ‘reasonable’ steps (you can’t control everything).
• Understand the privacy framework for the online services you plan to use
(try them out first).
• Provide alternate avenues for engagement and contact, so people can
select for their own privacy concerns.
• Provide clear context – what terms are participants bound by (social
network, your own).
• Communicate how personal information will be captured and used.
• Moderate privacy breaches and offer
14. What our(Bangladesh) Rule Say
Article 43 of our constitution clearly states that
“Every citizen shall have the right, subject to reasonable restrictions
imposed by law in the interests of the security of the State, public
order, public morality or public health-
(a) to be secured in his home against entry, search and seizure and
(b) to the privacy of his correspondence and other means of
communication.”