Over 50 pct Facebook users could delete accounts over privacy worries

London, May 20 (ANI): A security firm has suggested that more than half of Facebook users are considering deleting their profile from the site because of privacy concerns.

According to Sophos, a computer security organisation, concerns about privacy are running so high that 60 percent of the 1,588 Facebook users questioned said they were considering deleting their accounts.

A further 16 percent said they had already stopped using Facebook because they felt they had inadequate control over their data, while a quarter said that they would not be quitting the social networking site, which has almost 500 million users worldwide.

Facebook has attracted criticism in recent weeks for the perceived complexity of its privacy settings, and the fact that users have to opt-out of sharing some of their information with third parties, rather than give explicit consent by opting in.

Although Facebook is expected to look again at its privacy policy in the coming days, it may not be enough to halt an online campaign for a mass Facebook “suicide” on May 31, with thousands of users encouraged to delete their accounts.

“This poll shows that the majority of users are fed up with the lack of control that Facebook gives users over their data,” the Telegraph quoted Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, as saying.

“Most still don”t know how to set their Facebook privacy options safely, finding the whole system confusing.

“What”s needed is a fundamental shift towards asking users to ”opt-in” to sharing information, rather than to ”opt-out”.

“A mass exodus from Facebook seems unlikely, but users are clearly getting more interested in knowing precisely who can view their data.

“People use Facebook to share private information and are unlikely to want their holiday snaps or new mobile number accidentally popping up all over the Internet,” he added. (ANI)

Sri Lanka asks Prabhakaran to surrender by Tuesday noon

Colombo, April 20 (IANS) Closing in on the last Tamil Tiger stronghold, Sri Lanka Monday ordered elusive rebel chief Velupillai Prabhakaran and his fighters to surrender by Tuesday noon or face death.

‘We have issued the last and final 24-hour ultimatum to Prabhakaran and his group to surrender,’ defence ministry spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told reporters Monday.

‘The ultimatum began this noon (Monday and) will expire tomorrow (Tuesday) noon. Otherwise, they will have to face the military course of action,’ he said.

The ultimatum to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) came a few hours after the defence authorities said over 30,000 civilians fled Sri Lanka’s northern war zone, as troops moved deep into the last Tamil Tiger stronghold in Mullaitivu district.

‘Latest reports received from the army’s 58 Division indicate that over 30,000 civilians held hostage by LTTE terrorists at Puthumathalan and Amplalavanpokkani areas have been liberated,’ the defence ministry said, adding several thousand more civilians were waiting to be rescued.

It said the mass rescue operation reached a significant phase when troops captured the three-kilometre long earth bund built by the LTTE on the western border of the no fire zone (NFZ).

According to the defence ministry, the mass exodus of Tamil civilians began Monday morning when the troops ‘opened a safe route for the hostages to come out of the LTTE grip’.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is also the commander-in-chief of the armed forces personally visited the operation room of the Sri Lanka Air Force to witness the mass exodus of civilians via satellite images and the way the operation was conducted some 350 km northeast of Colombo to rescue the civilians.

The president’s office in a statement said this surge of civilians ‘is an apt response to all those calling for a temporary pause in the humanitarian military operations of the government or a longer ceasefire, to enable the Tamil civilians to flee the armed grip of the LTTE’.

‘The record has shown that such well-intentioned pauses are non-effective with the ruthless terrorists of the LTTE.’

Hailing the efforts by the troops, it said that the exodus in the island’s north ‘is no less a massive vote for freedom than the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989′.

‘The thousands seeking their safety under the Sri Lankan flag is a clear vote of confidence in the security forces. They have given the lie to those who kept warning of an impending bloodbath and humanitarian catastrophe,’ it said.

There was no response from the LTTE, which has been fighting to carve out a separate state in the northern and eastern region of the island.

Separatists in Kashmir offer to help rebuild temples

Srinagar, Apr 1 (ANI): Separatists in Kashmir have offered to help rebuild and renovate temples damaged during the near two decades militancy. asin Malik, chairman of the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front Muhammad, said that a committee could be formed for the purpose, stressing that it should be “apolitical”.

“We have asked them to initiate a non-political committee. We will provide them with whatever help they need to renovate the temples. The committee will comprise people related to civil societies, intellectuals, students, Kashmiri pandits and it must be non-political,” Malik said during a visit to a photo exhibition here on the deteriorating state of temples.

Kashmiri Hindus, or Pandits as they are locally called, say that soon after their mass exodus when an armed insurgency broke in 1989, successive State Governments have neglected their places of worship.

With some of the temples burnt by the separatist in early nineties, the rest of these historical temples are in shambles as there are no caretakers.

“It took us two years to collect these photographs. We wanted to show these pictures to the Kashmiri society before approaching the State Government or the Central Government,” said Sanjay Tikoo, President, Pandit Sangharsh Samiti.

More than 300,000 Kashmiri Hindus were earlier present in the state, but now only 3,000 have been left behind.

The Kashmiri Hindus say that there are more than 565 temples in Kashmir valley and some of them are more than 3,000 years old. (ANI)