• Time change. Until now, Twitter has made a clear distinction between people you follow and people you don't follow: You only saw tweets from those whom you followed. Now, the service, in what it calls a "timeline experiment," will place tweets on your timeline from select users that you are not following. Twitter is using an algorithm that determines which such tweets you will see based on the users that you do follow, the popularity of the users you do not follow, and other factors. You won't be able to opt out of this feature and some frequent Twitter users have complained that it removes one of the factors that distinguishes Twitter from other social media platforms.
  • False flag. We wrote recently about the fake Facebook account that the Drug Enforcement Administration created to gather information for a narcotics investigation. On October 17, Facebook's chief security officer wrote a letter to DEA Administrator Michele Leonhart calling the agency's actions a "knowing and serious breach" of Facebook's policies. Facebook asked the DEA to confirm that it had stopped engaging in this tactic. Facebook's letter specifically questioned the DEA's contention that the woman who was the subject of the fake account implicitly consented to use of her personal information for such purposes when she consented to a search of her phone.
  • Square deal. Foursquare has been known mostly as a check-in app – a place where you post your location but not much more. The company's new ad campaign hopes to change that image and to position Foursquare as a food-oriented rating and recommendation network similar to Yelp and Urbanspoon. "Introducing the all-new Foursquare, which learns what you like and leads you to places you'll love," is the new slogan on the Foursquare website. The ad campaign will roll out in mass transit in New York and Chicago and in bike-share locations in the Windy City.

Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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