![]() The odds of this happening probably aren’t great, but they exist.įurthermore on this point, Photo Sync could end up annoying the hell out of your friends. I don’t expect Facebook to be perfect … which is why I won’t be enabling Photo Sync: Because there’s a chance my entire iPhone’s photo gallery could potentially be pushed to the site because of a glitch. ![]() There was the time that third party apps were accidentally leaking user data, and how gay students were exposed when Facebook’s privacy settings failed. Not just Facebook, of course, but many social sites have accidentally made private content public. Reason number one: Facebook has messed up privacy settings before. I’m a pragmatist, and I’m not buying into Photo Sync for a few reasons. Facebook went ahead and put two and two together and created a feature that would leverage our growing interest in mobile photography with our growing interest in sharing our images on Facebook and created a simple, easy, automatic way for us to do it.īut as fate would have it, I’m not an optimist. photos were being taken with smartphones. And you can’t really blame the social network for introducing the feature: Facebook is the largest photo-sharing website in the world (some 300 million photos are being uploaded to the site daily), and as of last year approximately 27 percent of all U.S. If you’re going to be pushing your smartphone photos to the social network anyway, Photo Sync inarguably streamlines the process. The optimists (and constant uploaders of photos to Facebook) among us hear all this and think Photo Sync sounds convenient.
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