My point is that the DRM-style argument can't work because bits can't be restricted in this manner.
I mean, I'm still trying to figure out what "look but don't re-share" means. There's absolutely no way to enforce that.
Facebook saying that they are honoring user's settings is a false sense of security, because your address is accessible to me via my email program, that's how I was able to give it to facebook. I can still use your email address I already had for any purpose.
The only people their policy protects is people you friended on facebook without using email address book integration, but that's not the topic here.
I suppose if the false sense of security gets people to use your website, you can exploit that, but that doesn't mean you can actually enforce it. And somehow I doubt people's email addresses being exposed via facebook is going to keep the majority of people from using facebook: everyone already gets spam, and most people don't know how to track how an email address ends up in spamming lists. Facebook may already be selling email addresses to spammers and most people would never know.
It's actually in facebook's interest to sell email addresses rather than expose email addresses to third party apps that contact you via facebook, because third party apps that contact you via facebook reflect badly on facebook's other (maybe legit) emails that come from facebook's servers/domains.
I mean, I'm still trying to figure out what "look but don't re-share" means. There's absolutely no way to enforce that.
Facebook saying that they are honoring user's settings is a false sense of security, because your address is accessible to me via my email program, that's how I was able to give it to facebook. I can still use your email address I already had for any purpose.
The only people their policy protects is people you friended on facebook without using email address book integration, but that's not the topic here.
I suppose if the false sense of security gets people to use your website, you can exploit that, but that doesn't mean you can actually enforce it. And somehow I doubt people's email addresses being exposed via facebook is going to keep the majority of people from using facebook: everyone already gets spam, and most people don't know how to track how an email address ends up in spamming lists. Facebook may already be selling email addresses to spammers and most people would never know.
It's actually in facebook's interest to sell email addresses rather than expose email addresses to third party apps that contact you via facebook, because third party apps that contact you via facebook reflect badly on facebook's other (maybe legit) emails that come from facebook's servers/domains.