Archive

Author Archive

Draft of Online Privacy Bill Released

May 5th, 2010 Sam Edwards No comments
Categories: Privacy Tags:

Facebook Safety Center Unveiled

April 13th, 2010 Sam Edwards No comments
Categories: Privacy Tags:

Learn About Protecting Your Privacy with Social Media Club Greenville

December 10th, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

smcgreenvilleimgThe Social Media Club of Greenville (SMCGreenville) are hosting their monthly meeting on December 14th at 8am.

Doug Cone of Nullvariable Web Consulting will discuss how to protect your online accounts by going into depth about phishing, security and privacy. Also at the meeting, Russell Tripp of Infusion Web and Videowill do an overview of Google Wave which he went into depth about at the last GreenvilleSMC meeting on December 8th.

Keep an eye out for local technology events from Social Media Club and other local technology related organizations to stay up to date and to socialize with people who use social media!

What Geotagging on Twitter Really Means

December 2nd, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

Geotagging: Adding Geographical information (Latitude and Longitude Coordinates) data to something. In this article, specifically to tweets. That means, that if you’re at the coffee shop, and tweet from there, those GPS coordinates are attached to the message you posted. Still don’t get it, check out Twitter’s Explanation of: What is Geotagging?.

Geotagging your Tweets

This is certainly an interesting feature, but I find that for the uninformed user, this is incredibly dangerous and they might not even know they should be weary.

Why You Should Be Weary

Sharing information, and finding people near you is great if you have the right intentions but some people out there are wack jobs and others are just smart enough to use the information to rob you. Here is the video explaining this robbery:

This happened WITHOUT geotagging. However, now that geotagging has come along, someone could tell that you are not at home by looking at the location of your tweet, no matter what you are saying. Granted, this is an opt-in service, but people still try the latest and greatest just for a “why not”. Here is a picture of the Twitter settings that allow you to turn on Geotagging:

TwitterGeoTagPreferences

Notice there is a button to “Delete all location data”.  I don’t remember seeing this before, but I have a feeling if it wasn’t there, it would heavily requested by people who get freaked out about what geotagging really means.

Microsoft’s Bing Maps now supports searching for geotagged tweets in a given area and is quite neat.  I wrote some test code today and ran it on one of the users that came up.  It showed me that they tweeted at what looked like home, and at school, and both of those tweets had timestamps.  With this sort of information, trends about how a person spends their day could be developed, and more robberies like the one mentioned above could happen.

Who would want to use Geotagging for their personal tweets?  Are you worried?

Google Knows Your Medical History

December 2nd, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

Google Health gives you a place to maintain your medical records that is accessible from anywhere. The idea behind it is that you can have a single place with all of your medical history, and you can share that with whoever you wish. This is great when you don’t remember that you went to the doctor because you had a cold, etc. I always forget the little things like colds and the date I went to the doctor, so this seems like a great thing. The idea of having a single place with your medical records will only improve the care that you receive because more information will be available for your doctors. Here is a screenshot of one of the pages in Google Health where you can add your conditions.

GoogleHealth

The scary part comes in when you consider what would happen if this information got out. Maybe insurance companies would turn you down because they knew about a previous condition, or someone you didn’t want knowing your medical history would know.

The world is becoming a place where all of our information, and everything we do is getting stored in “the cloud” and it only makes sense that our medical records will be too. But is Google the one that should do this? If not, who should? Would you use Google Health? I’m considering trying it out once I know more. Let us know what you think.


Source: Mashable

Categories: Health, Privacy Tags: ,

Facebook Used to Bust Kids on Underage Drinking

November 29th, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments
underage_drinking

Image Source: Palm Beach Post

Thought you could post your pictures from the party you went to tonight after you got back to your dorm? Sure, but be beware.

Students at the University of Wisconsin – Lacrosse were convicted of Underage Drinking due to pictures posted on Facebook.

As mentioned in our previous article: “If you don’t want your mom to see it, don’t post it.”

I guess the same thing goes for cops too.


Source: Switched.com

Categories: Children, Facebook, Law, Privacy Tags:

Mis-Interpreted Tweet by Alabama News Team

November 29th, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

The content you share online is viewed in many ways. Make sure you know in what context the content you publish is being displayed. This News Team from Alabama probably wouldn’t have wanted the picture of their three person news team next to this tweet:

billboardnewstweet


Source: Palmetto Scoop

Consultants, Don’t Keep it all Private

November 29th, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

Maximizing privacy settings sometimes seems like the only option and probably is the best option for most. However, consultants and anyone who is looking advertise their skill-set online, they might want to customize what they do make available for the public.

For instance, make selected portions of your profile and person information available, but only allow friends to see things such as Posts, Photos, Videos and Tags.

You can find more information on this in this post by InsideFacebook.com.

Twitter is Not a Place to Share Your Every Thought

November 28th, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

200px-Larry_Johnson_KC_ChiefsIt’s becoming evident that using Twitter to express yourself is just about the same as mentioning something in a press conference.

Larry Johnson, who played for the Kansas City Chiefs was released earlier this month as a free agent after bashing the coaching staff and disrespecting a fan on his Twitter account. This action to release Johnson was strongly encouraged by fans as more than 32,000 signed an online petition for his release from the team.


Sources: Mashable and Wikipedia

Facebook Privacy Settings

November 28th, 2009 Sam Edwards No comments

Here are some really good tips for setting up your Facebook Privacy settings. Ben Parr from Mashable.com is interviewed and closes the interview with:

“If you don’t want your mom to see it, don’t post it online.”


Source: CNN

Categories: Facebook, Privacy Tags: , ,