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7 Hazards of Social
Networking
By John Sileo
www.Sileo.com
Most of the risks of social networking fall into one of the following
categories, which I call the 7 Hazards of Social Networking:
1.
Impersonation. Does the social
networking account (e.g., Twitter Account) belong to the actual person
or company it is representing? For example, if you look at the Twitter
account @johnsileo,
you will see that my name is used to send business to a gentleman who
is also an identity theft speaker. My actual account is @john_sileo.
Whether this is considered social networking squatting or social
networking identity theft, it's impersonation.
2. Ownership. Who owns the
data on the social networking sites' servers? Do you own what you post
on Facebook, what you email through GoogleMail or the financials you
backup off-site on someone else's servers? The fact that you don't know
should trouble you as much as it does me.
3. Breach. How is your social
networking site protecting your profile and posting data? Are they
susceptible to bots like ZombieSmiles
that allow hackers into your Facebook profile through Facebook's own
client interface? Is it easy for a hacker to post something or appeal
to your friends as if the hacker is actually you (account takeover
impersonation)?
4. Fraud. Social networking is
based in relationships of trust. You trust the people you befriend.
Unfortunately, some studies suggest that 25% of the users accept friend
requests from total strangers. This, along with account takeover
impersonation, opens you up to "friend in distress" scams, information
gathering and other forms of social networking fraud.
5. Disclosure. We are far
bolder and far less discretionary with what we share online versus what
we share in person. This means we risk giving out information that,
given a second thought, we didn't want to. Think of the New
York Times reporters who tweeted about a closed-door meeting where
they discussed charging for online content.
6. Human Error. Have you ever
hit the button on an email that was meant to go to someone else? The
same phenomenon happens on social networking sites, but the damage is
exponential because of the medium - you might have just sent it to
hundreds or thousands of followers or friends. I call this phenomenon Tweet
Breach.
7. Underestimation. Because
social networking started out as a personal application and still has
the flavor of being controlled by individuals (as opposed to
corporations), we often underestimate the sheer destruction caused by
mishandling this tool. I believe that this is what happened to the
military. They originally underestimated the data leakage taking place
in the social networking sphere and have since, wisely, begun to
rethink their strategy.
Until
we recognize that anything posted on the internet (especially if social
networking is involved) is Public, Permanent and Admissible in court,
we will continue to underestimate the hazards of social networking.
About the author: John
Sileo became America's leading Identity Theft Speaker &
Expert after he lost his business and more than $300,000 to
identity theft and data breach. His clients include the Department of
Defense, Pfizer and the FDIC. To further bulletproof yourself and your
business, visit John's blog at Sileo.com and receive a free white-paper: Privacy Means Profit: Safe Data =
Profitable Data. Permission granted for use on
DrLaura.com.
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