Ohh, LiveJournal, why do you DO things like this to yourself...?

http://www.newsweek.com/id/96366

"The site in question is Spokeo (spokeo.com), which promises that it"finds your friends' blogs and photos that you never knew about, guaranteed" and "tracks your friends' new content, so you don't have to visit their Websites one by one." What this means is that when you sign up for Spokeo, it uses the addresses from your Web-based e-mail accounts to create a list of "friends"—which, in practice, is just about anyone you've e-mailed. Then it proceeds to scan 36 popular sites with social features, pulling together everything your friends have posted into a single, easy-to-read format. All tidbits are fair game:LiveJournal blog posts, YouTube videos, even Amazon wish lists. Most disturbingly, Spokeo never notifies your contacts that you're watching them.

Stalktastic! Yey for creepy, invasive privacy-rape!
Yey for people with only the most casual contact with you being able to use your email address to find, say, your secret, known only to a tiny, trusted few journal! Yey for your BOSS being able to find anything you haven't marked private, even if nobody tells him the name of your journal at all! Yey for your grandmother finding your naughty drawings, which you've put under a warning, but the rss feed can still get to, because you didn't lock them! Yey for your ex getting all the details on your first date with the new lover, even if you've changed your journal name, and banned him from the old one... yeah, that'll be fun, won't it?

Now I know, this one's not squarely on LJ's head, however; can such data really be mined by a second party user without LJ's having agreed to it and opened the back door? That is a legitimate question, because I? Artist/writer/creative type, and not so much with the computer structures and database architecture. If it's do-able without LJ's say so, it's STILL creepy as all get out though, and I don't like it even one tiny little smidgen.

So there's a fix for it, apparently. This info, I got from [info]mynn's IJ account, in this post here, and have implemented it on my LJ already. (Edit: that post is friends locked. Sorry for the inconvenience.)

1. While logged in as your account, go to the admin console here:

http://www.livejournal.com/admin/console/


Minimize what is sent "out" via feed by entering this into the console and clicking execute:

set synlevel title

Then only the title of your posts are sent to her reader, and she has to log into LJ to read the post and "save it" manually if she wants to.

As I said above, I've already done this in my LJ. Now I need to have a look at IJ and see whether I need to do something similar over there. Because my LJ invites people into certain aspects of my life, NOT into my underwear drawer, damn it!

EDIT: Yes, you DO have to make the same change on InsaneJournal. To get to the admin console, go here: http://www.insanejournal.com/admin/console/ and paste the same code as the above into the field before hitting 'execute'.

Comments

*sigh* I suppose I will sign up to see what people get about me -_-
Thanks for posting this. If you do find that we need to do something similar for IJ, please let us know. *sighs*

Yes, you need to do this for IJ, too

The default syn level is to "full" instead of title.

Also, there are Two damned places in Vox you need to turn off "search by email", the wankers. I'll give them a bit of my mind when I have more time.

The entry you linked (no problem!) is f-locked, but I do plan to make a public version of this with more specific examples and details later this week.

Re: Yes, you need to do this for IJ, too

What two places out of curiosity?
Fucking hell. I just signed up with my personal email address, and it's telling me so damned much. I'm pretty unhappy about this. I think I'm about to try switching everything fandom related to an alternative address that I don't use to email people I know in person :-/.

A client who emailed me once on my personal address when my work one was down has posted new photos on Myspace. A fandom friend who used it once has favourited an article somewhere. Several people have posted pictures on Flickr as well as alternative picture hosting services.

It's horrible, actually. I really don't want to lock my journal here. I *like* having it public, because it's (so far) been kept separate from my other stuff.

D-:
Although. Interestingly, a friend who I know blogs daily, unlocked, on LJ is showing up as having no content at all... This bears further investigation.

please follow up

they might have "minimize this or that" set in some obscure place on LJ that I'd want to tell peopel to set.

Re: please follow up

Actually, I can't find LJ entries for anyone on my list, and I *know* several of them have posted publicly in the last few days. Some of those might have settings changes, but at least one is a near total luddite and wouldn't have changed anything other than turning her layout pink and uploading a couple of icons.

Re: please follow up

Okay, I spent a while digging around in Spokeo, and it was easier just to post about it, since I ended up figuring out a couple of different things along the way:

http://ships-harry.insanejournal.com/39290.html

In short, it doesn't seem to be too much cause for alarm as far as journals go, but wow, watch it with Flickr or Picasa etc.

Re: please follow up

Yeah, and myspace. It aggregates like mad, yo, for that.
Thanks!
Gosh. That's scary! Thank you so much for passing on the info! Is it okay to link to this post? Or would you prefer I copied the info instead?
I don't mind either way, since I'm just forwarding the linkage from someone else who'd done the footwork. Whichever you think your flist would be most likely to take seriously.
Thanks. I'll do a post right away.
thanks for the heads-up about this
Thanks for the heads up.
Thanks for the heads-up. :)
Personally I think more people need to realise that the internet is public, and that any blogging site, whether it has internal aggregator features like LJ or otherwise, is of course, going to serve up its content for external aggregators. I think where LJ/IJ fails is in making the options like feed settings easier to access.
Thank you! :)
thank you for this! I am not as skilled at the programming end as I wish I were... would have never found that on my own.
I think that they only way to link a journal to an email is if you used the same email to sign up for the journal *and* you make your email public.
Nope. I have my email set to private on several things that popped up. It's finding the privacy-based opt-out that does it.
Thank you for letting us know. This is a very disturbing development. I followed your instructions immediately, but I'm still shocked and uneasy.
Thanks so much for the heads-up and the fix.

(Anonymous)

This LJ spying, are my flocked entries safe?
I don't know for sure. The best thing to do would be to insert the code I mentioned in this post, and therefore opt out of the entire program.