Social media is designed for you to share but you should take care to set the privacy levels so you know who can see your information and postings.
1. Click in the top right of Facebook and select Settings.
2. Click Privacy in the left column.
For other things you share on Facebook, you can select the audience before you share.
To go to Privacy Checkup:
1. Click at the top of any page on Facebook (example: your homepage).
2. Select Privacy Checkup.
Things you can review in Privacy Checkup:
- Who can see what you share. This section guides you through things like:
- Choosing who can see certain information on your profile, like your phone number, email, birthday and relationship status.
- Updating who can see your future and past posts.
- Reviewing who you’ve blocked on Facebook. For example, you can add people to your blocked list. Learn more about what happens when you block someone on Facebook.
- How to keep your account secure. This section will guide you through things like:
- Updating your password. Learn more about creating a strong password.
- Turning on alerts to help let you know if someone logs into your account from a place we don’t recognize.
- How people can find you on Facebook. This section lets you choose who can:
- Send you friend requests.
- Look you up on Facebook by your phone number or email address.
- Your data settings on Facebook. This section lets you review and remove recently used apps and websites from other companies that you’ve used Facebook to log into.
Other ways to manage your privacy:
- Learn more about how to control who can see what you share. From here, you can learn how to:
- Select an audience for your posts.
- Change the audience for your past posts.
- Edit basic info on your profile and choose who can see it.
Basic Privacy Settings
In Facebook on a PC, click on the top right menu item and select Settings then Privacy and you should see as below.
You choose who can see your postings, profile etc. The choices are Public, Friends, Specific Friends or Only Me.
Set “Who Can Contact Me”. The choices are Everyone or just Friends and Friends of Friends
Set “Who Can Lookup Me Up” and whether you want search engines outside of Facebook to find your profile.
That’s all quite straightforward. Basically you decide if you want the world to see what you put on Facebook or restrict it to friends.
The Audience Selector Tool
When creating a new post on your timeline, there is a drop down box which allows you to determine the audience for the post. You can choose Public, Friends, Friends Except (you pick which friends to exclude), Specific Friends (you pick which Friends to include) or Only Me.
You’ll find an audience selector tool most places you share status updates, photos and other things you post. Click the tool and select who you want to share something with.
The selector tool remembers the audience you shared with the last time you posted something and uses the same audience when you share again unless you change it.
Profile
To set or modify your profile information, click the ‘Update Info button on bottom right of your header photo. You can then set a new header photo, profile photo, location, family and relationships, schools, professional skills etc.
Everyone can see this public information, which includes your name, profile picture, cover photo, gender, username, user ID, and networks.
To see what your profile looks like to other people, use the View As tool.
Timeline
Only you and your friends can post to your Timeline. When you make a post you can set the audience. When other people post on your Timeline, you can control who sees it by choosing the audience of the Who can see what others post on your Timeline setting.
As you edit your info, you can control who sees what by using the audience selector.
Privacy Check
Facebook lets you make a quick health check on privacy settings. Click on the question mark (or maybe a padlock symbol) on top right and select Privacy Check.
1) Posts – As explained below, this will explain how to control your privacy settings for every post.
2) Apps – Who sees your activity within APPS from outside suppliers
3) Profile – How much personal information is to be shown
Use Facebook wisely and don’t give any information to people without considering the possible