So, from a technical standpoint, I would say that the large social profiling companies, Google, FB, Twitter, etc. Are probably the saftest places that exist for consumer data. I understand that there have been security breaches in the past. But none to the scale of Equifax, and that is a gov subsidized company that manages our most private financial information.
The way a buddy of mine that worked at Google explained it, is that customer information is everything to them, after all it is what they sell. Or perhaps what they trade access to. So they have the best security teams in the world ensuring that their top assets, our data, is secured.
This doesn't make me comfortable in the least bit. Especially with all the political and social engineering that they have done, and which has come to mainstream light in the past several years. So I unavoidably trust them with my data, but not with politics, news, or education.
Large social media apps will protect the data as much as they can reason it is gold mine for them and they wont like it is getting easily in hands of few.
So overall, I would say big social media companies will do their utmost best to protect the data from getting leaked. Since that is something on which they will be making money.
So rest assured your data is in safe hands, however the data will be used for their benefit else the platform won't be free.
I find it quite hard to trust social media networks, though it has its good side too, but the bad sides of it is dominant as well. One has to be smart and vigilant whole using social media
I don't believe everything I see on the net. It has been proven over time that governments uses information to control and direct the minds of the masses.
Not really. But it's time to put trust back into social networks. And it starts by playing an active, engaged role in these networks instead of blindly and blindly trusting everything you read online.
@pablo_fatas what would it take for you to trust a free product? For startups, having a free social media, is the quickest way to get usersf rom the get-go, so just urious if you have ways around that? We will be making revenue drivers not from data or personal data, nor will we use that for ads, since we have figured out other rev drivers that will make more than that. Let me know if you have any thoughts on what it would take for you to trust something like that
Not at all. I think it's important to remember that companies like Facebook aren't just an app on your phone - they're multi-billion dollar companies. They really don't have your best interest in mind.
If the product is free, you are the product.
First of all, most of the social media platforms are free and to make money they use adds system by using your perosnal information and interests. I don't trust them that much.