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Ways To Adjust Privacy Settings In Facebook
Have you been wondering how to be social on Facebook while still keeping your privacy
under control? When you join a site like Facebook you take the chance of letting your
private information run wild. By adjusting your privacy settings you'll have more control
over who sees what.
Dividing up your Friends
Is your mom really on the same level of friendship as your roommate? Is your boss on the
same level as your drinking buddies? What to block certain content from an ex-boyfriend? Facebook allows
you to organize your friends into different groups, which can later be used to determine who sees what.
To do this, go to https://www.facebook.com/bookmarks/lists. There's a button at the top that says "+ Create
List." Clicking it allows you to create a list of your choosing, then add any of your friends to it. You might
make lists like “high school friends” or “family” or “co-workers” or “only the best friends”.
Once you’ve split up all your friends into different lists—what's next?
Control Who Sees What you Post
Facebook allows you to control who can see what you post
using a special “audience selector” drop down menu. With
each status update, photo upload, or information shared, you
can click on the small “drop down” arrow to select the
specific audience: public, friends, only me, custom, or one of
the friends lists you’ve previously created.
Control your Default Privacy
You can also set a default privacy level of all the things
you share. To get to your privacy settings, click the
account menu
at the top right of any Facebook page,
and choose Privacy Settings. Here you can select the
default setting for you posts: public, friends, or custom.
Choose “custom” in order to select particular friends lists as your default visibility settings. You can also
exclude individual people from seeing status updates or photos.
From this same privacy settings page, you can control if people can find you on Facebook, whether people
can tag you in photos, your advertising and app privacy, and even whether people can view past posts.
How You Connect
These settings determine how people can find or connect with you on Facebook, including who can search
for you via email or phone number, who can send you friend requests, or who can send you Facebook
messages. The most open setting is “Everyone”, and the most private is “Friends” only.
Timeline and Tagging
These are important settings to control who can tag you in posts and photos, and who can see those tags:
• Who can post on your timeline? This setting controls who is able to post on your own Wall and
Timeline. The options are either “Friends” or “No one”.
• Who can see what others post on your timeline? When someone else posts on your Wall, you can
control whether all friends can see that content, or only certain lists.
• Review posts friends tag you in before they appear on your timeline. When a friend “tags” you in one
of their own status updates, it will automatically appear in your own timeline, allowing your friends to
view the item. You can change this setting so you must approve the tag before it will appear on your
own wall.
• Who can see posts you’ve been tagged in on your timeline? This setting controls the visibility of any
tags you’ve approved (or that are automatically approved).
• Review tags friends add to your own posts on Facebook. Sometimes a friend can add a tag to one of
your own posts. These can be allowed automatically, or you can control and approve them with this
setting.
• Who sees tag suggestions when photos that look like you are uploaded? Facebook has advanced facial
recognition software, so if it thinks it sees your face in a photo uploaded by someone else, it might
suggest tagging that photo with your name. You can turn this feature off, or make it available to your
friends.
Apps, Games, and Websites
On Facebook, your name, profile picture, gender, networks, username and user id (account number) are
always publicly available, including to apps. Also, by default, apps have access to your friends list and any
information you choose to make public.
You can edit these settings to control what additional information is shared with apps, games, and websites.
You can also turn on “Instant Personalization” which links your Facebook account to external website (like
Pandora) to view relevant friend activity off of Facebook.
Public Search
From the same “Apps, Games, and Websites” settings page, you can control whether your Facebook profile
is visible on search engines like Google. Turn this setting off if you don’t want your profile page listed in
search engine results.
To learn more visit: www.facebook.com/help/privacy