Who Owns Your Social Identity?

Think that username you use all over the Internet is yours? Maybe not.
social_media_identity1

Imagine if you woke up one day to find your blog had been renamed without warning by your hosting service and your user name given to someone else.  Or what if Twitter decided to give your username away?

According to IEEE Spectrum‘s Steven Cherry these things can happen. To find out how much ownership we really have over our online identities, Cherry interviewed technologist and journalist Tristan Louis on his weekly podcast who talked about what he learned after studying the Terms of Service agreements for sites like Facebook and Twitter.

Ironically, Louis told Cherry that if Twitter wanted to collect all of Cherry’s podcasts and sell them to the highest bidder, or take all of his tweets and put them into a book, it could legally do so. While Louis said Twitter’s TOS are actually very readable compared with other sites filled with legalese, its terms put Twitter, and not users, in control of content on the site.

Louis said Facebook, which is commonly blasted for its privacy policies, says it will at least alert users before moving them to another account name, as well as give them a right to challenge the decision.

To hear Cherry’s podcast with Louis, go to IEEE Spectrum.

This entry was posted in Blogging and Social Media, Internet and Online Business and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.
  • http://profiles.google.com/chershaytoute Diane Foushée

    Having started working with online communities back in the late 80s, I find this type of article interesting. I have to wonder (not having looked at various TOS recently), if these sites are claiming ownership, do they accept responsibility for removal of the innappropriate? That was something we truly wrestled with, back in the day…

  • shanna

    @msgurl:disqus noone better not give my information away. to anybody or change anyting with out asking my permission first

  • Anonymous

    That could backfire if they do it to someone willing to make a real big public stink over it. Someone who has the wherewithal to do it right. And what if they get celebs on their side. It could make for a bumpy battle. And then they could take those posts and make them into a book and add a whole new dimension to the battle too. Ah, the humanity, the humanity of it all.

  • http://twitter.com/ed_han ed han

    Now that’s an important wake-up call. Thank you.