I haven't read this entire thread, so I'm jumping into the middle. John Hasler gave you excellent advice when he suggested creating your own web site (or a web site on some other social media type network) that has less aggressive privacy policies.
Then in response to your concern: > But this data will invariably be intertwined with personal information. > Being a mom and pop shop there's bound to be stuff we want to put up but I > don't want facebook to own. On facebook, create an account just for the business (separate from a personal account that you might also have). On that business account, don't put any information that you consider proprietary just advertise (in the best way you can) the other site where they can find the information that you are (apparently) worried about losing control of. Randy Kramer On Thursday 09 February 2012 08:42:23 pm Nick Lidakis wrote: > On Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 09:56:10AM +0000, Jon Dowland wrote: > > On 05/02/12 00:09, Nick Lidakis wrote: > > >But using this facebook app I would still need to create a facebook > > > account, yes? > > > > Facebook's privacy concerns only apply to whatever data you give > > them. Set up an account and only supply business-data: promotions > > etc., stuff for which exposure is a *good* thing rather than bad. > > But this data will invariably be intertwined with personal information. > Being a mom and pop shop there's bound to be stuff we want to put up but I > don't want facebook to own. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201202110907.18305.rhkra...@gmail.com