face book security tips
Log Out of Unused Apps
You're not logged into Facebook from a browser or app that you haven't used in over a month.
Get Login Alerts
We'll let you know if your account is logged into from a new device or browser.
Manage Your Alerts
We'll let you know if your account is logged into from a new device or browser.
Get notifications
Email login alerts tondeamato@hotmail.com
What are login notifications or alerts?
Login alerts are an extra security feature. When you turn on login alerts, we'll send you a text message, email or notification each time someone logs into your account from a new place.
https://www.facebook.com/help/162968940433354
To turn on login alerts:
Go to your Security Settings
Click the Login Alerts section
Check the box next to the type of alert (ex: text message) you'd like to receive and select Save Changes
Keep in mind that you need to add a mobile number to your account to receive text alerts.
After you turn on login alerts:
You can save a device or browser to your list of trusted browsers or recognized devices. This way, you won't have to keep getting alerts about the computer or mobile phone you usually use to log into Facebook. Don't choose this option if you're using a public computer.
If you ever receive a login alert from an unfamiliar browser or location, follow the instructions in the notification to reset your password and secure your account.
Protect Your Password
The strength of your password is more important than how often you change it. Only change your password if these tips could make it stronger:
Don't use your Facebook password anywhere else online.
Never share your password. You should be the only one who knows it.
Avoid including your name or common words. Your password should be difficult to guess.
Legacy Contact
My Legacy Contact
A legacy contact is someone you choose to manage your account after you pass away. They'll be able to do things like pin a post on your Timeline, respond to new friend requests, and update your profile picture. They won't post as you or see your message
Log Out of Unused Apps
You're not logged into Facebook from a browser or app that you haven't used in over a month.
Get Login Alerts
We'll let you know if your account is logged into from a new device or browser.
Manage Your Alerts
We'll let you know if your account is logged into from a new device or browser.
Get notifications
Email login alerts to
What are login notifications or alerts?
Login alerts are an extra security feature. When you turn on login alerts, we'll send you a text message, email or notification each time someone logs into your account from a new place.
https://www.facebook.com/help/162968940433354
To turn on login alerts:
Go to your Security Settings
Click the Login Alerts section
Check the box next to the type of alert (ex: text message) you'd like to receive and select Save Changes
Keep in mind that you need to add a mobile number to your account to receive text alerts.
After you turn on login alerts:
You can save a device or browser to your list of trusted browsers or recognized devices. This way, you won't have to keep getting alerts about the computer or mobile phone you usually use to log into Facebook. Don't choose this option if you're using a public computer.
If you ever receive a login alert from an unfamiliar browser or location, follow the instructions in the notification to reset your password and secure your account.
Protect Your Password
The strength of your password is more important than how often you change it. Only change your password if these tips could make it stronger:
Don't use your Facebook password anywhere else online.
Never share your password. You should be the only one who knows it.
Avoid including your name or common words. Your password should be difficult to guess.
Legacy Contact
My Legacy Contact
A legacy contact is someone you choose to manage your account after you pass away. They'll be able to do things like pin a post on your Timeline, respond to new friend requests, and update your profile picture. They won't post as you or see your message
Make Your Facebook Profile More Private in 6
Easy Steps
Time Victor Luckerson
Managing Facebook’s labyrinthine
privacy settings is an ongoing challenge, not least because the options
available to users are constantly changing. The social network has given people
increasingly granular control over where their posts are shown and what pieces
of personal data are used to serve ads. But these additional options have also
made managing Facebook privacy even more confusing.
Here, we’ve put together a
six-step guide to locking down your Facebook account as best as possible.
Step 1: See What Your Public Profile
Looks Like
The first thing you’ll want to
do is figure out how much of your Facebook info strangers can see. To do so, go
to your profile page and click the three dots in the bottom right corner of
your cover photo. In the dropdown menu that appears, click “View as.”
This will take you to a version
of your Facebook page that appears the way it does to users who are not your
friends. Certain information, like your name, current profile picture and cover
photo, will always be viewable by strangers. But you can determine who sees
other kinds of content. Try scrolling through your profile page in this view to
see how many of your posts are publicly viewable to people who aren’t your
friends.
Step 2: Decide Who Can See Your
Posts
During Step 1 you may discover
you’ve inadvertently been sharing posts with everyone on Facebook. Every time
you make a post, Facebook gives you the chance to quickly decide which audience
to share it with.
To the left of the “Post”
button, you’ll see a box that shows who will be able to see a given piece of
content. Click the box to choose an audience from a drop-down menu—the most
common are “Only Me,” “Friends,” and “Public” (which includes anyone on or off
Facebook). You can also share posts with people in your current city or create
custom lists. That lets you share your baby photos only with family members,
for instance.
Whatever audience you select for
a certain post becomes the default going forward. So if you make one “Public”
post, Facebook will default to making all your posts “Public” thereafter. If
you find you’ve inadvertently been making too many posts Public, Facebook also
has an option buried in its settings to retroactively make old posts more
private. Click the down arrow in the top right corner of Facebook, then select
“Settings” from the drop down menu. On the Settings screen, click “Privacy” in
the left-hand rail, then select “Limit Past Posts” in the “Who Can See My
Stuff?” section.
Step 3: Get Rid of Intrusive
Apps
Over the years you've likely
given dozens of apps permission to access your Facebook data in order to
quickly login or pull up a roster of contacts. Facebook's been keeping track of
all those apps, and now gives you the ability to restrict particular apps'
access to information.
On the Settings screen, select
"Apps" in the left-hand rail. You'll be presented with a grid of all
your Facebook-authenticated apps. Click any app and you'll see an itemized list
of every piece of personal information you share with the app, ranging from your
birth date to your photos to your location. You can choose to stop sharing any
individual data point or remove the app's connection to your Facebook account
outright. You can also turn off an app's ability to send you Facebook
notifications. That could prevent you from continuing to get annoying updates
about your aunt's Candy Crush habit, for instance.
Step 4: Make Yourself Harder to
Find
Facebook made all user profiles
searchable back in 2013, making it easier for other people to find you on the site.
But users still have the ability to stop Google and other search engines from
listing their profiles in search results.
On the Settings screen, select
"Privacy" in the left-hand rail, then answer "No" to the
final question listed, "Do you want search engines outside of Facebook to
link to your profile?" On the same screen you can also choose whether you
want anyone to be able to send you friend requests or only friends of friends.
Step 5: See Ads That Don't
Leverage Your Personal Data (As Much)
Facebook tracks your browsing
habits across the Internet and uses this data to serve you more personalized
ads. If that sounds creepy to you, you can tell the company to stop. In the
Settings menu, click "Ads" on the left-hand rail. The first section
deals with what Facebook calls "online interest-based ads." If you
turn this setting off, you'll still see the same number of ads, but they won't
be tailored to your Web history off of Facebook. All your actions on Facebook
are still fair game for serving targeted ads, though.
Just below this option is a
setting to turn off ads paired with your social actions. When this setting is
on, Facebook uses your Likes and shares to make ads in other people's News
Feeds more appealing. So if you like the Doritos page, that information might
appear alongside a Doritos sponsored post in a friend's feed without your
knowledge. Select "no one" in this section and Facebook won't use
your Likes in this way.
Step 6: Block Troublesome Users
You can block specific users by
selecting the "Blocking" option on the left-hand rail of the Settings
menu. You can block users outright, meaning the users can't see your profile or
add you as a friend. You can also block users from doing specific actions, like
sending you event invites or app game invites (again, good for that Candy
Crush-addicted aunt). Also note that there's a separate blocking option for
Facebook Messenger on this settings page as well.
Users can also add users to a
"Restricted List" on this page. Anyone on the list will only be able
to see the posts and information you share with the entire public—and they
won't know they've been placed on this list. So if you want your co-workers to
see your helpful Facebook privacy articles and not your raucous party photos,
you might consider placing them on this list (and labeling certain posts
"Public" as needed).
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