
Strangers know who you are talking too
There is a bit of concern that Google's new Gmail-based
social-networking tool, Buzz may tell complete strangers all your secrets.
A feature that compiles a list of the Gmail contacts who
users most frequently e-mail or chat with and Buzz automatically starts
following them It also makes the list public, meaning strangers can see who
Buzz users have been in contact with. As Silicon Alley Insider pointed out a wife could
discover that her husband emails and chats with an old girlfriend or a boss
could discover a subordinate emails executives at a competitor.
Of course it is not quite as bad as that. Buzz only
shares information about other people who are using Buzz and have set up public
profiles in Google. So currently, most Gmail users are not publicly listed by
the service. Users can also "unfollow" people who they don't want to
be linked to. Buzz requires users to set up a public profile before
they can post messages, it does give them an option to hide who they are
following and who is following them.
However, the default setting is to make the information
public, and only users who click on an "edit" tab can see the choice
to opt out. So people might start using
Buzz may be publicly linked to other users without knowing.