Category Archives: Online identity

Filter bubble savvy and how to get out of it

Graphic depicting the world wide web - a place where you can be in a filter bubble

The world wide web – a place where you can be in a filter bubble

The term ‘filter bubble’ only entered my lexicon last week when my daughter was doing a university assignment on the topic. It is, I learnt, the phenomena where we are served up web content based on what web sites we’ve visited in the past, what searches we’ve made and what comments we’ve made on blogs such as Facebook. Of course I knew that this happened, but I didn’t realise it was called a filter bubble.

Let’s look at this a little more closely. Do you recall times that ads have popped up that related to previous searches you’ve made on the web? Or, if you’re a Facebook user, why certain news items or ads are served up to you? This is your filter bubble at work. Continue reading

The naked truth about our online identity

Here is an interesting article about our online identity and ‘anonymous’ genomic data being used to identify people from freely available information they’ve posted on the internet.  It leaves one to wonder whether it’s best to withdraw from the internet altogether and hide under a rock or go all out and share your identity with the world.  I think what it all comes down to is being fully aware of what you post online.

Study reveals why many are now no longer anonymous onlineOn the internet, nobody knows you’re a dog – but it is getting increasingly easy for someone to figure it out. As more and more of our personal data – and those of the people we know and are related to – gets posted online, the anonymity promised by being behind a computer screen gets more and more elusive, according to a new study out Thursday in the US journal Science.

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