Frictionless Fears: In its never-ending quest to make sharing yourself online even easier, Facebook has introduced a new, creepy feature: frictionless sharing. Frictionless sharing lets users seamlessly and instantly share their activity on certain apps and websites on Facebook. For example, if you are listening to something on Spotify or reading an article on a news site, it will show up on Facebook. It’s basically sharing without having to click a “like” button. But what does this really mean for users, besides being hyper-synched with Facebook? Well, it seems to be a pretty big privacy breach, and people aren’t happy about it. Facebook never seems to have given up on the promise of Beacon, its first ill-fated attempt at forcing oversharing on its users. Frictionless sharing means Facebook cookies remain open and can track your browsing habits and acquire personal data. As David Winer wrote in a blog post on this new Facebook sharing model,“[T]hey’re doing something that I think is really scary, and virus-like. The kind of behavior deserves a bad name, like phishing, or spam, or cyber-stalking.” Nik Cubrilovic, an entrepreneur and hacker, elaborated on Winer’s post on his own blog, explaining that even if you logout of Facebook, the cookies can still track you. Once again, Facebook gets creepy. HuffPo
Unwanted Internet Fame: When Angie Varona was 14 years old she took provocative pictures of herself in lingerie and in bikinis and put them on her private Photobucket account. Someone hacked her account and leaked her private photos on the Web. Against her will, Angie became a “jailbait” Internet hit. It’s sad and sick, but it’s no surprise, which is probably the saddest part. Pulling provocative pictures of young girls from social networking sites has become a more and more common creepy practice, a new source of underage erotica. Angie and her father contacted the FBI to help get the pictures off of the Web, but there are still Angie Varona fan pages and blogs with her photos and 499,000 Google search results for her name. Gawker
Weird Find of the Day: Apparently there is an annual “What They Ate” contest put on by Veterinary Practice News, which judges the best x-rays that vets send in of weird things that pets have eaten. Check out the strange collection of items that our four-legged friends have decided to swallow. (Warning: a little gross). Veterinary Practice News
Video of the Day: A recitation of all 50 states from a compilation of movie clips. Random. Cool.
Tumblr of the Day: If Jack Kerouac had been a bro instead of a beatnik: On The Bro’d, “Every sentece of Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, retold for bros.”
More in Media
‘JG believed that even in a demanding industry, it was possible to lead with both rigor and humanity’
The industry pays respects to OpenX CEO John Gentry, who sadly passed away last week.
The Rundown: Google has drawn its AI payment lines — and publishers’ leverage is narrow
For publishers trying to navigate AI licensing, the message was blunt: Google is willing to pay for access, but not for training – and it remains unwilling to define AI Overviews as a compensable use of journalism.
Media Briefing: Google’s latest core update a reminder that pageviews can’t remain the primary metric
Google’s latest core update signals pageviews can no longer be the primary metric, favoring intent-solving publishers over scale.