Facebook: 'Perpetual Worldwide License' Nothing to Worry About

CYBERSPACE — Social networking site Facebook said on Monday that it is not appropriating user content — despite changing its service terms to claim "perpetual worldwide license" to anything posted on the site.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said that changes to the site's terms of service were necessary to keep in step with how people share pictures, comments and other information in the online community.

"We wouldn't share your information in a way you wouldn't want," Zuckerberg said in an online posting. "The trust you place in us as a safe place to share information is the most important part of what makes Facebook work."

Under the terms of service, Facebook has the right to freely use anything people add to the website, even after members have deleted the material or closed their account.

"It is common language in every website, because their cutthroat lawyer says you need to cover yourself," said Future of Privacy Forum director Jules Polonetsky. "This doesn't mean that Facebook can make a mini-series on your life or write a book about you, but they might be able to create a feed that lets your friends on Twitter know what you're doing.

"Folks should just calm down."

The new terms of service can free Facebook to technologically innovate ways members can share pictures, comments, videos or other digital content without hitting legal tripwires, according to Polonetsky.

Facebook remains bound by its promise to honor privacy settings that members use to dictate who can see particular postings.

Facebook members — including many members of the adult entertainment community — routinely share comments, pictures and more online and the website needs legal permission to be a platform for such exchanges. Terms of service acknowledge that once pictures or messages are sent to friends at Facebook, senders surrender control of the data.

Internet users want full ownership and control of their online information while simultaneously being able to collect data from others, Zuckerberg notes.

"These two positions are at odds with each other," Zuckerberg wrote. "There is no system today that enables me to share my email address with you and then simultaneously lets me control who you share it with and also lets you control what services you share it with."

Facebook said the modifications made to its terms of service allow the website to work with the realities of sharing information online and but do not permit Facebook to commandeer content from members.

"We are not claiming and have never claimed ownership of material that users upload," Facebook said in an email response to an inquiry. "Any limitations that a user puts on display of the relevant content are respected by Facebook."

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