Selasa, 12 Agustus 2014

Justified or not? Outrage over Facebook Messenger

Facebook users are worried, some even outraged, over privacy issues concerning its new app, Facebook Messenger, but the fears may be unnecessary.


Many users are voicing concerns about the permissions they have to agree to before downloading the app. It's true, the app needs permission to use the camera, or to find contacts from a contact list, but its only when the user summons the app to do these things.


What's left out of all the news and consumer rants is that Facebook Messenger doesn't require users to give up any more personal information than what it already has with the current app.



'What this really is, is a public relations gaffe on the part of Facebook,' said John Simons, media and technology editor at the Associated Press.


Facebook posted a blog announcing some of the changes that would come with the new messaging app a few months ago, but it needed to do a little more hand-holding. Users are always on high alert when it comes to privacy so Facebook probably would have been better off being more transparent with users about how their personal info would be used.


The confusion seems to have stemmed from Android. 'The app when you install it, it explains in a list what it needs permission to do, and this is the list that frightened a lot people initially,' Simons said. 'That doesn't mean it sort of willy nilly goes about contacting friends or recording you as you go about your day using your phone's camera,' he added.


Unfortunately, Facebook wasn't able to fully explain the app before the outrage, but Simons thinks the public will come to grips with the reality of things. 'I think eventually the real explanation will get out and Facebook will bounce back from this,' Simons said.


-By CNBC's Christina Medici Scolaro

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