Priveyo Private Social Network
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Keep Your Children's Club Details Private With Online Privacy
Across America, those parents who are striving to create safer, more
reliable methods of entertaining their children have started creating
children's clubs. Whether these are involved with local religious
groups, feature organizations such as Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, and
4-H, or are just a collection of parents who want to provide safe
environments for their children's entertainment, they all have the
same goal in mind: give their kids a place to play that isn't filled
with danger.
However, when you use social media to communicate the plans of your children's
club with other parents, you couldn't be placing your children in
greater danger. When it comes to discussing plans in groups like
this, online privacy isn't exactly something that goes hand in hand
with group discussions. Social media privacy is so difficult to
achieve because social media makes its money from ads that target
consumers.
You've all seen the ever changing ads on the side of most social media
pages, and how those ads always seem to relate to words that you've
recently typed in on the social media platform. The creators of
social media make money every time someone clicks on one of these
ads. To that end, the more people who can see your children's club
posts and comment on them, the more opportunities for ads exist on
other people's screens.
To this end, your social media privacy is practically non-existent on
the major social networking sites. Even in your closed children's
group, when a member makes a comment, the social media site announces
to all of that person's friends that they made a comment on such and
such a board. They may not be able to read it, but the record of your
activity exists. Then, people who are curious about your group's
activities ask to join the group and someone lets them in. So much
for online privacy. Now people who aren't even in your neighborhood
are reading about your after school plans for Friday afternoon.
If you are wanting to keep your children's club plans private, and
afford your children with all of the protection you can offer, then
you need a social media privacy app that is actually concerned with
your online privacy. When you use Priveyo, you can control not only
who has access to your group with password protection, but also who
can see anything relating to the group's existence.
From the highest privacy settings, your children's club discussions are so
secure that even if someone knows the name of your group, they won't
be able to locate it through Priveyo's search engine. As far as
Priveyo is concerned, to the public, your group doesn't even exist.
With online privacy this secure, you can finally start making plans
for your children without needing to worry about who's creeping on
the children's group for uncouth reasons. Your discussions will be
secure, and your ability to plan safe again, thanks to Priveyo.
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Planning Private Parties With A Private Social Network
We've all tried to plan events for a small gathering of friends through social media before. What starts off as an honest attempt to plan a party for friday evening soon ends up with your friends inviting their friends, who invite their friends, and ultimately your intimate get together turns into a party that you can't afford all of the supplies for.
This is what happens when you rely on standard forms of social for your party planning needs. What you require is a social networking app that is designed around privacy. If you had used Priveyo's private social network to create the party event, you wouldn't be having to worry about all of those extra party guests showing up.
With regular social networking, your friends can invite friends to an event, who will invite their friends as well, and so on, simply because they each think that the party would be more fun if their other friends were present as well. With Priveyo's private social network, you could control the visibility of such an event, not only preventing anyone but you from inviting more people, but keeping those who weren't invited by you personally from even knowing that your party exists.
In a private social networking app environment, your private get togethers stay exactly as they were meant to be. Priveyo allows you to make your party a public event, so that your friends can invite their friends if they want to. But, if you happen to have a landlord who considers ten people to be "disturbing the peace", then you are going to need to keep a tight leash on the number of people who show up.
Keeping your privacy in check is Priveyo's primary concern as your social networking app. When what you have planned is an intimate gathering of five or six friends where you plan to cook a great meal, you need to make sure that no extra guests show up to your gathering.
Keeping your event under control comes in how you set up your group. Public events can be seen and joined by anyone who cares to be curious about your party. When you set your party to the protected level of security, anyone who knows about your party can search for the group that you made, but they will need the password in order to get in and see the details of when and where.
But for the ultimate privacy, your get together needs the private Priveyo setting. This private social network setting means that your party plans are completely invisible to everyone, until you personally invite them to join the group. This means that even those who have heard about your party still won't be able to find information about it through our social networking app. Even when they are invited, they will still need the password in order to get in, providing an extra layer of security to your party planning needs.
This is what happens when you rely on standard forms of social for your party planning needs. What you require is a social networking app that is designed around privacy. If you had used Priveyo's private social network to create the party event, you wouldn't be having to worry about all of those extra party guests showing up.
With regular social networking, your friends can invite friends to an event, who will invite their friends as well, and so on, simply because they each think that the party would be more fun if their other friends were present as well. With Priveyo's private social network, you could control the visibility of such an event, not only preventing anyone but you from inviting more people, but keeping those who weren't invited by you personally from even knowing that your party exists.
In a private social networking app environment, your private get togethers stay exactly as they were meant to be. Priveyo allows you to make your party a public event, so that your friends can invite their friends if they want to. But, if you happen to have a landlord who considers ten people to be "disturbing the peace", then you are going to need to keep a tight leash on the number of people who show up.
Keeping your privacy in check is Priveyo's primary concern as your social networking app. When what you have planned is an intimate gathering of five or six friends where you plan to cook a great meal, you need to make sure that no extra guests show up to your gathering.
Keeping your event under control comes in how you set up your group. Public events can be seen and joined by anyone who cares to be curious about your party. When you set your party to the protected level of security, anyone who knows about your party can search for the group that you made, but they will need the password in order to get in and see the details of when and where.
But for the ultimate privacy, your get together needs the private Priveyo setting. This private social network setting means that your party plans are completely invisible to everyone, until you personally invite them to join the group. This means that even those who have heard about your party still won't be able to find information about it through our social networking app. Even when they are invited, they will still need the password in order to get in, providing an extra layer of security to your party planning needs.
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