What Happens When Social Networks Go Mobile?
from the Friendster-+-mobile-+-stalker-=-? dept
Over at TheFeature, Howard Rheingold is wondering what happens when social networks go mobile? That is, take today's craze with social networking applications and put them on a mobile phone with some location-based software. As he points out, it makes sense at the purely instant messaging level: you may want to know that your friend just happens to be around the corner. However, he's not sure it makes sense in the friend-of-a-friend sense. Do you really need to know that the other guy in the elevator is three degrees away from you through some guy you once worked with? Probably not. However, as soon as you add in this location-based presence info, it starts to raise additional questions about privacy. A well-designed application might limit these by letting you very clearly define who you'll reveal info to, but these apps aren't always that well designed.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Two years ago
But then I realized a) everyone would have to be constantly updating it, and this group wouldn't bother - generally those that have time off would schedule something, or wouldn't and b) privacy concerns mean none of us would bother, either. Because it would be very easy to hack in, see who's "on the court", and go back and rob their place (being as some of them live in a rural area, where there's more robberies...)
All that being said - teens would be much more inclined to use something like this. Still, the "friend of a friend" option, as you pointed out, is a bad idea. And bloody dangerous, too.
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wireless devices
Could I create a database on the internet that associated these IDs with text messages? Like, "The owner of this phone is grouchy and stupid and owes me 20 bucks."
How would you prevent that?
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