The moral boundary is that most users would assume that this information would not be public because they themselves cannot see other peoples' information through the web ui.
I don't write much info to facebook because I haven't taken the time to understand their security and application model. I can't figure out what the knobs do, or who can see what.
now I've got to weigh the utility of seeing all my past events (which is actually pretty cool) against the creepiness that friends can see the same info.
These would be juicy queries:
* which events for which I was not invited to, but that many other friends of mine were?
* when a friend declines events that I attend, which event did they accept/attend instead (bonus points for events that I throw)?
As mentioned elsewhere, this might result in some hurt feelings. Also, it would be creepy to the muggles to know that such magic back-doors exist.
I don't write much info to facebook because I haven't taken the time to understand their security and application model. I can't figure out what the knobs do, or who can see what. now I've got to weigh the utility of seeing all my past events (which is actually pretty cool) against the creepiness that friends can see the same info.
These would be juicy queries:
* which events for which I was not invited to, but that many other friends of mine were?
* when a friend declines events that I attend, which event did they accept/attend instead (bonus points for events that I throw)?
As mentioned elsewhere, this might result in some hurt feelings. Also, it would be creepy to the muggles to know that such magic back-doors exist.