Jonathan Richards
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Facebook is to allow its users to create a hierarchy of friends within their profiles - in a move that threatens to complicate the already delicate social etiquette that governs the site.
As part of new controls to be introduced in the social networking site's privacy settings, Facebook users will be given the option of banning certain friends from seeing what they are up to and accessing sensitive information in their profile.
The change will mean that, for instance, a particular friend - a former partner, say - could be prevented from seeing that a person had changed their relationship status, while others could be banned from knowing the person's political or religious views.
Facebook also said it would dramatically expand the number of people to whom a person could expose their personal information by introducing an option to allow not only friends but friends of friends too to gain access to their profile.
At present, the maximum exposure that a profile can be given displays the profile to all the person's friends, and members of any network of which they are a part - typically private groups set up by employers, schools or universities. There will remain no option to expose one's profile to all Facebook users.
Facebook, which has nearly 40 million users worldwide, has grown enormously in popularity, but some have complained about the problems of social etiquette it has posed - for instance, whether one should accept 'friend requests' from people whom one has not seen for years, and where there is no desire to restore contact.
The site is hoping its users will appreciate being given greater flexibility to customise the privacy settings which they attach to their profiles.
A new feature similar to instant messaging services, called Facebook Chat, which will allow friends to communicate instantly with others who are online, will also be unveiled in the next few weeks, the site said.
Issues relating to privacy have been responsible for some of the hiccups Facebook has experienced since it was opened to the general public in late 2006.
In June last year, Facebook was forced to admit that a flaw meant users may have unwittingly been exposing certain personal details - such as their sexual orientation and religious beliefs - to others on the site.
In December, the site apologised for introducing a new feature that would have allowed a user's actions elsewhere on the web - for instance their puchases on Amazon - to be broadcast to their friends without consent.
The feature, called Beacon, has now been changed so that users have to 'opt in' before it is activated.
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Steven, I couldn't agree more. Am also mid 20's in London, and have zero interest in looking at photos of my ex-workmate's new dog or poking old schoolmates who I have hardly even thought about once in the last 8 years.
Those who I want to be in touch with, I am. You can email, phone or text me, or even better meet up and we'll have a pint together. Those who I have not sought to stay in touch with through any of those channels, or them me - well, I think that says it all really.
A large degree of the popularity, if my gf is anything to go by, is women wanting to have a nose at other people's holiday snaps. It's little more than a personalised (and less eventful) Eastenders.
Ollie, London,
Actually, I like Facebook. It allows me to easily keep in touch with people, post photos of my children for friends (rather than jamming their inboxes with photos they don't want). And the hierarchy is a nice bonus - I'm an author and TV commentator, so I have people I do not know from Adam requesting to be my friend. With the new privacy settings I can add them, limit what they can see, and everyone's happy.
Brian, New York, NY
The whole Facebook phenomena is beyond me. Before you think I'm past it and disinterested, I'm 25, male, a born and raised Londoner and work in a City job. Everyone I know is on it, but I refuse to join.
My philosophy is simple. If you're interested in keeping in touch with someone, call them or enjoy a pint together. If you're not, you lose touch, simple. I don't actually care what hairdo someone currently has that I haven't seen in 10 years, or indeed wish for them to read about me if they haven't been bothered to maintain contact.
Steven, London,
It amazes me that people with a Facebook profile divulge so much information in the first place, particularly as it is now common practice for companies to search on Facebook for employees or candidates who have approached them for a job. Having the option of showing only certain friends certain parts of your profile smacks of wanting to have your cake & eat it - one profile for your friends & one for networking on a more professional level? Surely the two are entirely separate domains? Whatever happened to actually meeting in person anyway?
Name withheld, Nottingham,
This is just a slightly more sophisticated version of the "limited profile" that has been available for a very long time.
James E. Petts, Burnham, England