When I checked into the hotel tonight, I fired up my macbook on the provided (hardwired! gah!) Internet connection and went about my evening routine (blogs, pocasts, email, twitter… you know the deal). When I popped open my iTunes to crank on some tunes something came to my attention: There was a remote library showing in my iTunes.
At first, I gave “John’s Music” very little thought, I was listening to a podcast at the moment and wasn’t interested in investigating. However soon after, when the show ended, my curiosity got the better of me and I went for a peek. The music itself wasn’t all that amazing, but upon closer inspection I noticed something else. I realized that I now knew far more about John than I thought I would and just from looking at iTunes.
Based on primarily his playlist names, and to a lesser degree the content, I was able to deduce:
- John’s last name
- John’s wife’s name
- John has two daughters
- John’s daughters’ names
- John owns an iPhone
- John’s wife owns an iPhone
- John is from the US
- John’s daughter (presumably the eldest) has an iPod Shuffle
- John is highly spiritual and a Christian
Those are some pretty crazy personal details… and they were all there for the taking right out of a publicly shared iTunes folder.
How do I Un-Share?
It’s actually ridiculously easy…

First, go to your iTunes Preference Panel…

Second, unselect the “Share my library on my local network” checkbox.
Now I realize that this may seem a drastic step for those who only ever use their iTunes at home. But if you travel, or make use of open public wi-fi hotspots (or poached ones) your iTunes library could be giving away personal information without you even knowing it. It also illistrates the point that not all Apple products ship in a “secure” mode as often touted. It’s not out-of-the-box functionality, but it isn’t difficult to poach files out of someone’s iTunes folder if they’re DRM free…
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