 Mark Zuckerberg is now a proud member of a "Boy Love" group, thanks to Facebook pranksters. A new feature on the social network allows you to add friends to groups of arbitrary titles without their permission. Users are adding people to groups with suggestions of illegality -- such as terrorism, pedophelia, narcotics, or hate groups. Facebook apparently still thinks this feature is a good idea. (Source: Facebook)
 Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook
Mark is now a proud member of NAMBLA
Any
avid fan of South Park should be able to recall NAMBLA -- the North
American Man/Boy Love Association -- which Cartman gets duped into
joining. The group actually exists in the real world, and has
generated much controversy over the limits of free speech for its
promotion of pedophilia, a illegal act in virtually all nations.
But
NAMBLA is now in the spotlight for quite a different reason.
Pranksters have used Facebook's new features to create a NAMBLA group
and have been adding their friends and coworkers to it. The
first high profile target to be hit was TechCrunch
editor Michael Arrington.
But Mr. Arrington sought revenge,
adding his friend to the group as well. And that friend was
none other than Facebook-founder Mark Zuckerberg, 26, who is now
officially a member of the "Boy Love" group.
According
to Sophos' security expert Chester Wisniewski, these aren't
isolated incidents. One of Mr. Wisniewski was added
to a group "What about all the good things Hitler did?"
The
problems arise from a new
feature that allows users to tag friends in special titled
circles dubbed "groups" (not to be confused with the former
non-taggable Facebook groups). Facebook intended users to
create things like "family" or "college buds",
but the feature has been largely used for pranks and malicious
purposes thus far.
The world's largest social network has not
rolled the feature out to all its users. Under the
implementation any friend can add you to an arbitrarily titled group,
though you get a notification and can leave the group at any time.
There is no way to block friends from adding you to groups
currently.
Mr. Wisniewski blasted Facebook's lack of
discretion, pointing out that given the government's increasing
surveillance of Facebook friends adding each other to groups with
suggestions of illegal activities like terrorism could create
real-world legal woes for the victims of their prank.
Facebook
thus far has defended the feature. A company spokeswoman
writes PC
Magazine,commenting,
"We made the decision to allow Group members to add others to
the Group in order to make the product simple, and because it
resembles something we all understand: adding one of your contacts to
an e-mail thread. Similarly to the controls in place for photo
tagging, you can remove yourself from a Group at anytime. If you
remove yourself from a Group, you can't be added back by a
member."
The site has long been criticized for
its handling of user privacy, but Mark Zuckerberg insists that
users don't
care about privacy as much anymore.
"If you can find a PS3 anywhere in North America that's been on shelves for more than five minutes, I'll give you 1,200 bucks for it." -- SCEA President Jack Tretton
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