Following up on Frienditto
Mar. 4th, 2005 09:54 pm(Learn about Frienditto)
In previous entry, I started to test the friendslocked post archiving:
Three, and this is the big one that is concerning to so many: the archiving by a friend (or someone with their username and password) of friendslocked posts *you* make. There appears to be functionality for a LiveJournal user to archive an entry posted by an LJ-friend, and whether that friendslocked post is archived publicly or privately is not clear, but I'm betting (based, again, mostly on the FAQ) both.
OK, I've successfully handed over a username and password to one test LJ in order to post a friendslocked entry from the *other* test LJ. Saw the new (friendslocked) post show up immediately on the frienditto livejournal and on frienditto.com itself.
Completely public access to that post. At no point in time did I log in to any kind of account on Frienditto to do this, that might limit the access of others to the post in question.
I'm going to come back in a minute and see how to create a Frienditto account without handing over any personally identifying info or $$ (if possible), with its private archiving, but that's of far less import than the purely-public-access side of this system.
In previous entry, I started to test the friendslocked post archiving:
Three, and this is the big one that is concerning to so many: the archiving by a friend (or someone with their username and password) of friendslocked posts *you* make. There appears to be functionality for a LiveJournal user to archive an entry posted by an LJ-friend, and whether that friendslocked post is archived publicly or privately is not clear, but I'm betting (based, again, mostly on the FAQ) both.
OK, I've successfully handed over a username and password to one test LJ in order to post a friendslocked entry from the *other* test LJ. Saw the new (friendslocked) post show up immediately on the frienditto livejournal and on frienditto.com itself.
Completely public access to that post. At no point in time did I log in to any kind of account on Frienditto to do this, that might limit the access of others to the post in question.
I'm going to come back in a minute and see how to create a Frienditto account without handing over any personally identifying info or $$ (if possible), with its private archiving, but that's of far less import than the purely-public-access side of this system.