Leave a Comment | Posted by Scott Glaser on February 17, 2010
MADONNA on GLEE preview–>
Posted in: Scott Glaser Blog
Madge is a total-gleek–>
Madge is a total-gleek–>
OMG…..Barbie and Ken!!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZF59DBmYA…
Somewhere Paula is crying in the fetal position on her couch….WATCH—>
No One is safe from the Guido’s on Jersey Shore…..not even the original Boy Band, take a look–>
Vanilla Ice 2010 y’all!
Check out the X Factor novelty act’s video for their mashup of Under Pressure/Ice Ice Baby – featuring a cameo by Vanilla Ice himself – above!

We can hear the theme song now and imagine the whole Tanner brood running over the hill!
The San Francisco home featured in Full House located in Alamo Square on Postcard Row is up for sale.
Homes in the area go for about $1.5 million, but we think owning Danny Tanner’s house would be priceless.
We’d be inviting John Stamos over for dinner every Sunday in hopes he’d perform with Jesse and the Rippers in the living room!
That would be TGIF-reakin AWESOME!
Right?
In December, Facebook made a series of bold and controversial changes regarding the nature of its users’ privacy on the social networking site. The company once known for protecting privacy to the point of exclusivity (it began its days as a network for college kids only – no one else even had access), now seemingly wants to compete with more open social networks like the microblogging media darling Twitter.
Those of you who edited your privacy settings prior to December’s change have nothing to worry about – that is, assuming you elected to keep your personalized settings when prompted by Facebook’s “transition tool.” The tool, a dialog box explaining the changes, appeared at the top of Facebook homepages this past month with its own selection of recommended settings. Unfortunately, most Facebook users likely opted for the recommended settings without really understanding what they were agreeing to. If you did so, you may now be surprised to find that you inadvertently gave Facebook the right to publicize your private information including status updates, photos, and shared links.
Want to change things back? Read on to find out how.
1. Who Can See The Things You Share (Status Updates, Photo, Videos, etc.)
Probably the most critical of the “privacy” changes (yes, we mean those quotes sarcastically) was the change made to status updates. Although there’s now a button beneath the status update field that lets you select who can view any particular update, the new Facebook default for this setting is “Everyone.” And by everyone, they mean everyone.
If you accepted the new recommended settings then you voluntarily gave Facebook the right to share the information about the items you post with any user or application on the site. Depending on your search settings, you may have also given Facebook the right to share that information with search engines, too.
To change this setting back to something of a more private nature, do the following:
2. Who Can See Your Personal Info
Facebook has a section of your profile called “personal info,” but it only includes your interests, activities, and favorites. Other arguably more personal information is not encompassed by the “personal info” setting on Facebook’s Privacy Settings page. That other information includes things like your birthday, your religious and political views, and your relationship status.
After last month’s privacy changes, Facebook set the new defaults for this other information to viewable by either “Everyone” (for family and relationships, aka relationship status) or to “Friends of Friends” (birthday, religious and political views). Depending on your own preferences, you can update each of these fields as you see fit. However, we would bet that many will want to set these to “Only Friends” as well. To do so:
3. What Google Can See – Keep Your Data Off the Search Engines
When you visit Facebook’s Search Settings page, a warning message pops up. Apparently, Facebook wants to clear the air about what info is being indexed by Google. The message reads:
There have been misleading rumors recently about Facebook indexing all your information on Google. This is not true. Facebook created public search listings in 2007 to enable people to search for your name and see a link to your Facebook profile. They will still only see a basic set of information.
While that may be true to a point, the second setting listed on this Search Settings page refers to exactly what you’re allowing Google to index. If the box next to “Allow” is checked, you’re giving search engines the ability to access and index any information you’ve marked as visible by “Everyone.” As you can see from the settings discussed above, if you had not made some changes to certain fields, you would be sharing quite a bit with the search engines…probably more information than you were comfortable with. To keep your data private and out of the search engines, do the following:
Woah this is pretty nasty:
“Active ingredients found in counterfeit fragrance include things like urine, bacteria, antifreeze,” Valerie Salembier, senior vice president and publisher of Harper’s Bazaar, said.”
Would you still buy them??
Can’t WAIT!~
She wrote the 2010 Winter Olympic Theme–>
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