Facebook self-censorship: What happens to the posts you …

It's at this point that you reconsider your status update.

Photo by Slate

A couple of months ago, a friend of mine asked on Facebook:

We spend a lot of time thinking about what to post on Facebook. Should you argue that political point your high school friend made? Do your friends really want to see yet another photo of your cat (or baby)? Most of us have, at one time or another, started writing something and then, probably wisely, changed our minds.

Unfortunately, the code in your browser that powers Facebook still knows what you typedeven if you decide not to publish it.* It turns out that the things you explicitly choose not to share aren't entirely private.

Facebook calls these unposted thoughts "self-censorship," and insights into how it collects these nonposts can be found in a recent paper written by two Facebookers. Sauvik Das, a Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon and summer software engineer intern at Facebook, and Adam Kramer, a Facebook data scientist, have put online an article presenting their study of the self-censorship behavior collected from 5 million English-speaking Facebook users. (The paper was also published at the International Conference on Weblogs and Social Media.*) It reveals a lot about how Facebook monitors our unshared thoughts and what it thinks about them.

The study examined aborted status updates, posts on other people's timelines, and comments on others' posts. To collect the text you type, Facebook sends code to your browser. That code automatically analyzes what you type into any text box and reports metadata back to Facebook.

Storing text as you type isn't uncommon on other websites. For example, if you use Gmail, your draft messages are automatically saved as you type them. Even if you close the browser without saving, you can usually find a (nearly) complete copy of the email you were typing in your Drafts folder. Facebook is using essentially the same technology here. The difference is that Google is saving your messages to help you. Facebook users don't expect their unposted thoughts to be collected, nor do they benefit from it.

Facebook, on the other hand, is analyzing thoughts that we have intentionally chosen not to share.

It is not clear to the average reader how this data collection is covered by Facebook's privacy policy. In Facebooks Data Use Policy, under a section called "Information we receive and how it is used," its made clear that the company collects information you choose to share or when you "view or otherwise interact with things. But nothing suggests that it collects content you explicitly dont share. Typing and deleting text in a box could be considered a type of interaction, but I suspect very few of us would expect that data to be saved. When I reached out to Facebook, a representative told me that the company believes this self-censorship is a type of interaction covered by the policy.

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Listen To "Cyberspace Spirit," China's Anthem To Internet Censorship

It would be easy to make fun of China's new anthem glorifying internet censorship. But I don't want to pan"Cyberspace Spirit" or mock the Cyberspace Administration of China choral group signing it, because they literally don't know what they're missing.

The Great Firewall of China truly sucks. If you or I tried living a day behind it, we'd quickly realize how much we take free speech andperhaps more importantlythe freedom to read that speech for granted. There are nearly 3,500 websites that are blocked in China, including Google, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Vimeo, most of Wikipedia, and nearly all of WordPress. How much would it screw up your cyberspace spirit if you couldn't access these key services?

According to The New York Times, this anthem to censorship was performed at a Beijing Internet Association event this weekand the Chinese government has been deleting the video evidence ever since. "Can China now claim to have censored the online celebration of its own Internet censorship agency?," asks the NYT. "The Beijing Internet Association did not respond to a request for comment."

Luckily, video does still exist, along with translated lyrics:

Devotedly keeping watch over the space every day, Taking up our mission as the sun rises in the east,Innovating every day, embracing the clear and bright,Like warm sunshine moving in our hearts.Unified with the strength of all living things,Devoted to turning the global village into the most beautiful scene.

An Internet power: Where the Internet is, so is the glorious dream. An Internet power: From the distant cosmos to the missing home.An Internet power: Tell the world that the Chinese Dream is uplifting China.An Internet power: I represent my nation to the world.

In this world all rivers flow to the sea, Assuming the measure of Chinese civilization.Five thousand years of history condensed to illuminate innovation,Integrity is the clear ripple of a nationality.We are unified between heaven and earth,Faith and devotion flow like the Yellow River and Yangtze.

An Internet power: Where the Internet is, so is the glorious dream. An Internet power: Thinking of home from the distant cosmos.An Internet power: Tell the world that the Chinese Dream is uplifting China.An Internet power: I represent my nation to the world.

There's nothing like the steady cadence of a military march to celebrate a governmentespecially when that government makes it impossible for its citizens to find out what it's up to. [NYTimes]

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Listen To "Cyberspace Spirit," China's Anthem To Internet Censorship

Street Fighter 3 2nd Impact CENSORED – Akuma’s Defeat Portrait’s Blood – Video Game Censorship – Video


Street Fighter 3 2nd Impact CENSORED - Akuma #39;s Defeat Portrait #39;s Blood - Video Game Censorship
Did you know non-Japanese versions of Street Fighter 3 2nd Impact ( ) censor Akuma #39;s defeat portrait? In the JP version of SF3 2nd Impact...

By: Censored Gaming

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Street Fighter 3 2nd Impact CENSORED - Akuma's Defeat Portrait's Blood - Video Game Censorship - Video