This tool allows people using natural language searches to find nearly anything indexed on Facebook FB +1.40% — "Photographs of friends between 2010 to 2012″ or "Theme Parks in San Francisco"- giving them another reason to share information and spend more time on Facebook. It's also another reason to double-check your privacy settings.
This is just the beginning," the post said. "We're currently working on making it easier for people to search and discover topics, including posts and comments"
Here are three things you should check to protect your information:
Photos: Depending on your friend's privacy settings and whether they use tags, unflattering photos may be available to unintended audiences. Before graph search, people would have to go to an individual's profile and look through the photos section to find pictures that a person was tagged in. Now, your photos are one query away and can show up through search variables such as time, Location and other people.
To review your photos, click on your profile and then click on "Activity Log." On the left side of the screen, click on "Photos" and then "Photos of You." A stream of your photos should show up in chronological order. On the top bar, under the "Shared with" option, select to see what photos are exposed to certain audiences, such as "public," "friends" or "friends of friends." For example, if you click on public, you can see every photo exposed to Facebook's members, such as Instagram photos you shared with Facebook and a friend's public photos you are tagged in. Go through the list to make sure you are comfortable with the content. If a friend tagged you in a photo you don't want to be tagged on, untag yourself so that it isn't searchable. While you can't remove your friends' photos from Facebook, you can ask them to take the photos down. And you can enable "Tag Review" under your activity log to review any tags friends place on your content.
Profile: You can show up on graph-search results based on interests, location, gender and other information in your profile. Click on your profile and then click on "About." You can go through each section by clicking the "edit" button in each box and then selecting the audience that you want to share that information with, such as "public" or "only me." If you scroll beyond the basic profile info, you'll see different interest buckets such as movies and books. On the top right corner of each box is a pencil button that reveals an "edit privacy" option. Click that and select which audiences get to see what stuff you've liked.
Future posts: Facebook provides a shortcut to set default privacy settings for future posts. On the top of the page you should see a small security padlock icon. Click that, and then click "Who can see my stuff." The first option is to select the audience for "Who can see my future posts."
This is just the beginning," the post said. "We're currently working on making it easier for people to search and discover topics, including posts and comments"
Here are three things you should check to protect your information:
Photos: Depending on your friend's privacy settings and whether they use tags, unflattering photos may be available to unintended audiences. Before graph search, people would have to go to an individual's profile and look through the photos section to find pictures that a person was tagged in. Now, your photos are one query away and can show up through search variables such as time, Location and other people.
To review your photos, click on your profile and then click on "Activity Log." On the left side of the screen, click on "Photos" and then "Photos of You." A stream of your photos should show up in chronological order. On the top bar, under the "Shared with" option, select to see what photos are exposed to certain audiences, such as "public," "friends" or "friends of friends." For example, if you click on public, you can see every photo exposed to Facebook's members, such as Instagram photos you shared with Facebook and a friend's public photos you are tagged in. Go through the list to make sure you are comfortable with the content. If a friend tagged you in a photo you don't want to be tagged on, untag yourself so that it isn't searchable. While you can't remove your friends' photos from Facebook, you can ask them to take the photos down. And you can enable "Tag Review" under your activity log to review any tags friends place on your content.
Profile: You can show up on graph-search results based on interests, location, gender and other information in your profile. Click on your profile and then click on "About." You can go through each section by clicking the "edit" button in each box and then selecting the audience that you want to share that information with, such as "public" or "only me." If you scroll beyond the basic profile info, you'll see different interest buckets such as movies and books. On the top right corner of each box is a pencil button that reveals an "edit privacy" option. Click that and select which audiences get to see what stuff you've liked.
Future posts: Facebook provides a shortcut to set default privacy settings for future posts. On the top of the page you should see a small security padlock icon. Click that, and then click "Who can see my stuff." The first option is to select the audience for "Who can see my future posts."
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