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By Barbara Ortutay
NEW YORK
In an about-face following a torrent of online protests, Facebook is backing off a change in its user policies while it figures how best to resolve questions like who controls the information shared on the social networking site.
The site, which boasts 175 million users from around the world, had quietly updated its terms of use — its governing document — a couple of weeks ago. The changes sparked an uproar after popular consumer rights advocacy blog Consumerist.com pointed them out Sunday, in a post titled "Facebook's New Terms Of Service: 'We Can Do Anything We Want With Your Content. Forever.'"
Facebook has since sought to reassure its users — tens of thousands of whom had joined protest groups on the site — that this is not the case. And this morning, users who logged on to Facebook were greeted by a message saying that the site is reverting to its previous terms of use policies while it resolves the issues raised.
Facebook spelled out, in plain English rather than the legalese that prompted the protests, that it "doesn't claim rights to any of your photos or other content. We need a license in order to help you share information with your friends, but we don't claim to own your information."
Tens of thousands of users joined protest groups on Facebook, saying the new terms grant the site the ability to control their information forever, even after they cancel their accounts.
This prompted a clarification from Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's founder, who told users in a blog post Monday that "on Facebook, people own their information and control who they share it with."
Zuckerberg, who started Facebook while still in college, also acknowledged that a "lot of the language in our terms is overly formal and protective of the rights we need to provide this service to you."
But this wasn't enough to quell user protests, and the site also created a group called "Facebook Bill of Rights and Responsibilities," designed to let users give input on Facebook's terms of use. It also apologized for what it called "the confusion around these issues."
"We never intended to claim ownership over people's content even though that's what it seems like to many people," read a post from Facebook on the bill of rights page.
The latest controversy was not the first between the rapidly growing site and its users over its five-year history.
In late 2007, a tracking tool called "Beacon" caught users off-guard by broadcasting information about their shopping habits and activities at other Web sites. After initially defending the practice, Facebook ultimately allowed users to turn Beacon off. A redesign of the site last year also prompted thousands to protest, but in that case Facebook kept its new look.
Palo Alto, Calif.-based Facebook is privately held. Microsoft Corp. bought a 1.6 percent stake in the company in 2007 for $240 million as part of a broader advertising partnership.

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TOMK SAID IT BEST
For Heaven's sake, if you don't want something shared, don't put in on the internet. I've seen more arguments and confrontations between my teenage daughter and her friends because of Face Book than I care to count. Rumors get started and people's feelings get hurt. Like email, the written word is also easy to misinterpret and people tend to read what they want to into it. Even if the people you don't want to get the information is not listed as a "friend", belive me they will find out every negative thing you post. I personally have no desire to let people know that much about my private life.
Lots of applications
Most of us don't understand how far Facebook info can travel. If you "tag" another Facebook account owner in a picture, all of their friends get that picture. Imagine how surprised my nephew will be if he ever realizes a friend of his I have never met tagged him at a rave in Great Britain and auntie here got the picture!
Facebook
What people don't seem to get is that Facebook is not mandatory. There is nothing out there that says you MUST have a Facebook account and MUST share information. If you don't like their policies, don't open an account or close the one you have. Not to mention, if you don't like their policies, there are other social sites from which to choose. Facebook is not the only game in town. People nowadays are too quick to protest and whine, they need to assume some responsibility for themselves!
even deleting the information does not mean...
that the information you put out there is gone. You may as well figure that anything you put out on the internet is always going to be out there somewhere. Even if FB doesn't claim it as there own, somebody somewhere can find it. Be careful what you put on the web.
Facebook should delete...
Facebook should delete the information in the user's account after the user closes his/her account. We were under the impression that Facebook is a information sharing website amongst participants, NOT a behind-the-curtain information GATHERING tool for marketing products and criminals (government and otherwise.)