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CNET Conversations.
Molly Wood: Are you concerned about Facebook's privacy foibles obviously some of your users might feel exposed and I know that you know obviously you just announced a new privacy page on plus and the flicker connect thing was full of reassurances that it'd be only be for public feeds. But do you think your, but do you think your users are going to feel comfortable.
Carol Bartz: Well we feel quite fortunate, we are actually in a recent study the most trusted technical brand on the web and actually must trust a technical brand period, so we feel really good about that. Yahoo has taken privacy very seriously for a long time. We've also not only privacy but we also take very seriously the neighborhood, so making sure we really can watch what's coming on the page and cut spam and phishing and nudity and all those things that people just keep shoveling at you. So we have a lot of technology that does that, we have a lot of people watching that technology and we worked really, really hard on having our privacy policies be extremely simple, because it's important to people.
Molly Wood: Yeah definitely and what is your personal approach to privacy certainly mark -- seems to have a strongly held belief that the more information out there the better about people do you agree with that?
Carol Bartz: I think it that's a totally personal issue, some people really like to be right out there I don't, I don't think it is anything do with what I think its that every person gets to have a choice and it should be very clear to them how to dive in those choices.
Tom Krazit: But that's kind of exactly the opposite of how Facebook has operated over last six months.
Carol Bartz: People yeah but that's not, I'm not hear to say they have or haven't I mean I would admit a lot of their policies are pretty confusing, but I think they would learn, they are a young company they better learn from this.
CNET Conversations.
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