Keep your location private on Facebook, use Picasa's photo screen saver

Here's how to stop Facebook from adding your current location when you update your status

By Rick Broida, PC World |  Security, Facebook, Picasa Add a new comment

Oh, Facebook. Always with the weird, unwanted, hard-to-undo changes. Like a couple weeks ago, I noticed that all of a sudden, every status update I posted included my location!

I'm quite sure I didn't request or enable that feature.

Previously, each update would note the time it was posted: "8 minutes ago," "2 hours ago," "yesterday," and so on. Now, Facebook tacks on information about where I was when I posted: "near Wolverine Lake," for example.

Unlike!

If you've noticed this as well, you've probably pored through Facebook's settings in search of a way to turn it off. Amazingly, there is no such setting—not that I could find, anyway. But there is a way to disable this unwanted location awareness, and it's hiding in plain sight.

When you click in the Update Status box, you'll see your closest city listed in the gray bar along the bottom. I probably looked at this a hundred times without actually realizing what it was or why it was there—it just kind of snuck under the radar.

Mouse over that city and click the little 'x' to the right of it. Presto! No more location information tacked onto your status updates. If you want to restore it, just mouse over the now-blank area where the city used to appear, then click Add current city.

I'm glad this is such an easy change to undo, but annoyed that Facebook keeps slipping in stuff like this without notifying users or providing a straightforward opt-out option.

Add a Photo Screensaver to Windows With Google Picasa

If you're not using Google Picasa to manage your photos, I think you're missing out. It's one of the fastest and most versatile photo managers/image editors currently available, and you can't beat the price. (It's free.)

If you are already using it, you might be missing out on one of its best--and most often overlooked--features. I'm talking about the Picasa screensaver, which was formerly a standalone product. The screensaver cycles through the photos of your choice (more on that in a minute) using any of nine impressive visual effects: pan and zoom, cross-fade, checkerboard, and so on. Here's how to set it up:

Start Picasa. Click Tools, Configure Screensaver. Windows' standard screensaver window should appear, with Google Photos Screensaver already selected. Click Settings. Now it's time to choose one or more sources for your screensaver: Picasa, your Picasa Web Albums, one or more folders on your PC (which, admittedly, are probably already represented within Picasa, so this may not be necessary), and/or public sites. This last can be any RSS photo feed, like from Flickr and other sites. Just enable the sources that you want, then click Configure if you want to fine-tune the settings (which you'll need to do for PC folders and public sites). Next, choose a visual effect from the pull-down menu. You can also use the slider to adjust the time between photos. When you're done, click OK. Back at the main Screen Saver Settings menu, click Preview if you want to see the setup in action. You may also want to adjust the time before the screensaver kicks in. (10 minutes is the default, but I prefer something a little longer.) Click OK when you're done.

I think you'll love the Picasa screensaver, which effectively turns your PC into a killer photo frame (when it's idle, of course). And here's a bonus: If you have multiple monitors connected to your PC, the screensaver will take full advantage of them, showing a different photo on each one. Sweet!

If you've got a hassle that needs solving, send it my way. I can't promise a response, but I'll definitely read every e-mail I get--and do my best to address at least some of them in the PCWorld Hassle-Free PC blog. My 411: hasslefree@pcworld.com. You can also sign up to have the Hassle-Free PC newsletter e-mailed to you each week.


Originally published on PC World |  Click here to read the original story.

ITworld LIVE

SecurityWhite Papers & Webcasts

Webcast On Demand

Seven Deadly Sins of Cloud Security (Video)

As cloud computing gains popularity, too few people are aware of the security threats that are emerging. In this short video, experts from HP discuss the latest cloud security threats and explain measures to help overcome them. Hear about the seven deadly sins of cloud security and learn how to avoid becoming a victim of poor security in your cloud environment.Intel and the Intel logo are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

Sponsor: HP & Intel

White Paper

Establishing a Strategy for Database Security is No Longer Optional

The options for securing increasingly valuable databases are very broad and deep, and can be confusing. This research provides an overview of three categories of controls that should be implemented to ensure that enterprise data is protected in the most efficient and effective manner.

White Paper

Database Activity Monitoring Is Evolving

Read the analyst report and learn how you can leverage the core capabilities of a DAP solution for better database security.

White Paper

Protecting Against Database Attacks and Insider Threats: Top 5 Scenarios

Read this new eBook to learn the top five scenarios and essential best practices for preventing database attacks and insider threats.

Webcast On Demand

Distributed Database Security with Real-time Monitoring

View this demo and learn how IBM InfoSphere Guardium database activity monitoring can help protect your sensitive data in distributed DBMS environments with a holistic approach to data security and compliance.

Sponsor: IBM

See more White Papers | Webcasts

Ask a question

Ask a Question