Word: privacyã
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...night, Laura—a Harvard undergraduate whose name has been changed to protect her privacy??attended a list-only party at the Spee Club...
Facebook is a voyeur’s dream. Every picture and post on a “friend’s” wall is there for the looking. But one part of Facebook is sacred in its privacy??messages. If you want to keep something secret, you can always count on sending a private message that will be seen only by the intended reader (that is, of course, unless he or she shares what you write...
...staff time. It’s much, much simpler, and in any case, it’s better to take a product that’s been tested quite thoroughly than it is to do something from the ground-up.”‘SERIOUS CONCERN ABOUT PRIVACY??Joshua A. Kroll ’09, a former president of the Harvard Computer Society, says he is none too pleased about the outsourcing of student e-mail to Mail2World.“With any outside vendor, there’s a serious concern about privacy and data...
...someone looking back.” I interpret the message here to be about the importance of privacy. In my second year studying Japanese at Harvard, we learned that there is technically no word for privacy in Japanese; when the Japanese need to use the word “privacy??, they use the English derivative “pu-rai-ba-shi.” Until the twentieth century, there wasn’t even a word for the concept. From small Japanese towns to Tokyo highrises, everyone knows their neighbors’ business, because the walls...
...magazine’s new president, Ming E. Vandenberg ’08, wanted to take H Bomb online as part of rethinking its mission. But that never happened. Faculty adviser Marc D. Hauser, a psychology professor, said he opposed a move online because of concerns about student privacy??but he also emphasized that he did not play a role in decisionmaking...