Michael R. Strain, Columnist

Care About Internet Privacy? Then Prove It

The issue isn't about Facebook or Twitter. It's about web users' personal responsibility.

It’s in the user’s hands.

Photographer: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

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Millions of people received an email from Twitter last week advising them to change their password. Apparently a bug allowed some employees inside the company to see users’ passwords in plain text, creating the possibility that private information could be compromised.

I received this email, read it and promptly deleted it. I forgot all about it until the subject came up by chance in a conversation with a colleague the next day.