Castr is a free, open and anonymous platform for sharing video content that you find all over the web, a single space that gives you the ability to personally curate those things you think are amazing in the world. Because of the way in which corporations tend to mishandle your private information Castr will anonymize all of your activity, never keeping a record of your IP address, giving you a totally anonymous platform for sharing ideas and experiences with the world.
Castr is not a social network, its a sharing platform. Like “show and tell” day at school you can let people see the things you find interesting and yet do so without privacy concerns. We believe the time has come for a new model of shared content, one in which we never have to worry about being “tracked and targeted” and instead enjoy the things we love and share those with others.
via Castr — IndieGoGo.
Help Fund Castr on IndieGoGo #privacy
Zeynep Tufekci.. Can You See Me Now? Audience and Disclosure Regulation in Online Social Network Sites
The prevailing paradigm in Internet privacy literature, treating privacy within a context merely of rights and violations, is inadequate for studying the Internet as a social realm. Following Goffman on self-presentation and Altman’s theorizing of privacy as an optimization between competing pressures for disclosure and withdrawal, the author investigates the mechanisms used by a sample (n = 704) of college students, the vast majority users of Facebook and Myspace, to negotiate boundaries between public and private. Findings show little to no relationship between online privacy concerns and information disclosure on online social network sites. Students manage unwanted audience concerns by adjusting profile visibility and using nicknames but not by restricting the information within the profile. Mechanisms analogous to boundary regulation in physical space, such as walls, locks, and doors, are favored; little adaptation is made to the Internet’s key features of persistence, searchability, and cross-indexability. The author also finds significant racial and gender differences.