Policies and features on social networking sites are evolving rapidly. Social networking is not a modern concept, for people have been trying to share information since the Stone Age. However they lacked the technology of the present, but as technology and social networking evolved, privacy resisted extinction. As networking sites evolve more features will be implemented to aide control over information. The government has created and is developing new policies that govern social networking sites.
The information people put on display on their social networking profiles, is not up to the sites but the individual. Sites like Facebook let the user choose whether they want to display age, race, location, and occupation. The “publicness” as Auchard refers, is up to the individual, as the site has options to protect the user, the choice remains in the individuals hands, “but while policy makers ponder how to bolster online anonymity, social network users are more concerned about deciding what to recall about them next,’’ says Auchard. It is choice if people want to make very personal information public or private.
The communities on social networking sites are individually created. People have the right to