Green Room - Week 22 - Day 5
Apr. 30th, 2019 09:21 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
We've made it to the finale without anything fraying, until a little bit last night! But that's still really good!
https://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1064830.html
Or bad, maybe the people WANT drama - there were more comments yesterday than almost anything else this season. :)
One of the things brought up though got me thinking - what degree of privacy do you expect from the internet?
Most folks have different filters set up via different sites. But sometimes though filters fail.
When they do - is it the fault of the server provider for changing something or the fault of the person putting it out there knowing the risk?
Is the latter just victim blaming? It got me curious because every time I think I know "the rules" of internet privacy, it turns out that something has shifted in internet culture.
I know that *I personally* expect that my settings with stay in place as the default. I've always seen it as part of the social contract between myself and the provider. But in researching, I ran across others who thought my position was naïve and overly trusting - and that if I didn't want the information out there, I should never put it out there, even behind a filter.
Thoughts?
https://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1064830.html
Or bad, maybe the people WANT drama - there were more comments yesterday than almost anything else this season. :)
One of the things brought up though got me thinking - what degree of privacy do you expect from the internet?
Most folks have different filters set up via different sites. But sometimes though filters fail.
When they do - is it the fault of the server provider for changing something or the fault of the person putting it out there knowing the risk?
Is the latter just victim blaming? It got me curious because every time I think I know "the rules" of internet privacy, it turns out that something has shifted in internet culture.
I know that *I personally* expect that my settings with stay in place as the default. I've always seen it as part of the social contract between myself and the provider. But in researching, I ran across others who thought my position was naïve and overly trusting - and that if I didn't want the information out there, I should never put it out there, even behind a filter.
Thoughts?