There’s No Privacy on Facebook?? Who Knew?

Are You A Facebook Slave?

Know Who’s On Facebook Because of You

Some thoughts on blogs and enewsletters

A recent seminar participant emailed me today asking my recommendations on enewsletters and I’m responding via blog post as I often do…

The biggest challenge with enewsletters from my perspective is that you have to actually do them. At some point in time you realize it’s time to do the newsletter and if you haven’t been continually gathering content, you slap something together and send it out. It’s a pity, really, because you worked hard to get someone to sign up for the enewsletter, but you’re not making the most of the opportunity.

I used to be a big ConstantContact user and I had so many problems with them that I renamed them ‘ConstantConflict’. Constant battling over spam rates and an interface that was clumsy and difficult to use. Enewsletters became much more doable and sustainable for me when I found a tool that would convert blog posts into enewsletter content automatically via an rss feed [unfortunately or fortunately, ConstantConflict doesn’t offer that feature so it was easy to let them go.]

In the blogging workflow above, all I have to do is worry about creating one perfect post [like this one!]. That post automatically goes to my Facebook Page which in turn posts to Twitter — all automatically!

When it comes to enewsletters, I’m currently using FeedBlitz and it has worked well for me for many years. My newsletter goes out to my mailing list every night at midnight. It captures anything that I posted that day and turns it into newsletter content with a link back to my post. Magic!

I have to admit I’m getting more and more interested in MailChimp [although I have to admit that I HATE THE NAME]. I’ve heard great things about them and one of these weekends when I have some extra time I’m going to do a little experimenting. If I switch, you’ll be the first to know…

Questions? Feedback? You know what to do…

Blood in the social media waters

It would appear that Chuck Shumer smells blood in the water and sees a way to boost his flagging political career by shining a spotlight on Facebook…

“Facebook is feeling some political heat for its moves last week, after launching a program that “instantly personalizes” websites for visitors by automatically sharing user data with the site owner.

Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) wrote a letter to chief executive Mark Zuckerberg asking him and the company to revisit their decision on the program and move to an “opt in” default rather than an “opt out” one.

Facebook first mentioned the “instant personalization” program in a privacy policy released for public comment last month. After receiving hundreds of user comments (but not the level of outrage it saw when it unveiled the news feed four years ago), it approved the policy. While the program doesn’t share a user’s entire profile, it has ability to pass on information including a user’s name, their friends’ names, profile pictures, gender, connections, and content shared under the “Everyone” privacy setting. Although the company had planned to unveil the program with a wider number of partners, it ultimately winnowed the number to just three, with Microsoft, Pandora and Yelp.” Source: Sen. Chuck Schumer’s letter to Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook privacy | VentureBeat

While I’m not happy about Facebook’s recent moves but I’m horrified at the thought of eejits like Shumer interfering with the flow of information on the internet!

Having ‘fixed’ healthcare…

…the geniuses in Congress now want to ‘fix’ the internet…

“Calls to regulate social networks in the US are growing louder as Sen Charles Schumer (D-NY) has called on the Federal Trade Commission to set guidelines for how companies including Facebook and Twitter handle user data.

In a letter to the FTC, Sen Schumer said he was concerned that users were unwittingly sharing data they assumed was private with the entire internet, and that the sites made it too difficult for users to opt out of new settings that make information public by default. “The opt-out procedure is unclear, confusing, and you might even say hidden,” he said during a press conference.

Sen Schumer’s effort comes as regulators around the globe are grappling with the tricky issue of regulating social networks. In the UK, Germany, Italy, Canada and Australia, regulators are considering how their laws may already apply to the social networks, and what new laws may be needed.” Source: Sen Schumer calls for social networking oversight | Tech Blog | FT.com

Does anyone remember Senator Ted Stevens?

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ir_mKso_qc

Facebook Does What’s Best For Facebook

And so does Apple and so does Google, however, lately there’s been a lot of doing what’s best at the expense of the customer. Follow the ‘via’ link for the analysis…

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Disable Facebook’s “Instant Personalization”

Follow the Mashable link to regain control over your computer privacy…

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The Top 8 Social Media and Tech Stories This Week

Facebook and the purloined next generation iPhone were undoubtedly the topics on everyone’s quivering lips this week, but some other stuff went down as well: Google got called out on privacy issues, people remained stranded due to volcanic ash, some new 3D currency went into circulation, the Hitler Downfall meme went down and the Earth celebrated its official day in the sun.

Follow the ‘via’ link…

Posted via web from e1evation, llc

How to Restore Your Privacy on Facebook

“If you want the old level of privacy, you’re going to have to give up some functionality; if you want all the old functionality, you’re going to have to give up some privacy.”

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Is Facebook instantly sharing your data with third parties?

For years at my old job, every single time we added a new sweepstakes, contest or any new data capture form, all of the corporate parties would sit around a table and discuss the various elements of what data we were capturing. The area that we always had debate centered around whether we would default the opt-in marketing box to on or off. We always made the default off because we only wanted customers on our lists that actually wanted to be on our lists. Clearly if we were at Facebook, the default option would have a different initial result.

Last night I asked on Twitter if the new Facebook “socialization” options would be automatically transferred to sites that are using the Facebook widgets and APIs. Everyone basically said the same thing – that you must click the button to connect the website with Facebook.

Today I’ve confirmed my fear…Facebook is sharing our profile and usage data with third parties from the first moment you land on one of their “trusted partners”. Sure you need to opt-in to this “instant personalization” but guess what… Facebook already checked the box for you!

How do YOU feel about this? Is Facebook getting too big for its britches here?

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It’s not easy being social

THE Jay Baer and Zena Weist
Image by tysongoodridge via Flickr

Better said “It’s easy, but not simple”. Jay Baer’s got some great thoughts on adding social media to your mix…

“Social media isn’t inexpensive, it’s different expensive.

In the QA portion of recent speeches, I’ve frequently been asked this is great, but doesn’t it seem like it will take a lot of time?

Yes. It. Will.

Succeeding on the social Web requires daily participation. Whether it’s brand reputation management, PR and influencer outreach, customer service and social CRM, interacting with fans on a brand community, or just creating content that builds thought leadership — it all takes time.

Fundamentally, there are no shortcuts in social media, because the entire premise is that you’re interacting with customers one on one (or one on few). That is of course more time consuming than reaching hundreds, thousands, or millions of customers at one time with a paid advertisement. How could it not be so?

The only way America is even keeping its head above the global water line is by squeezing every last drop of productivity out of all of us. Please raise your hand if you’re working fewer hours these days than you did five or ten years ago. Exactly. Unless you’re somehow on Justin Bieber’s management team, you’re probably busting your hump like never before, tethered to the world by the iWhatever. So, I recognize that you probably don’t have the time to really commit to social media, and neither does anyone on your team.” Source: Nobody Said Social Media Was Easy Continue reading “It’s not easy being social”

What Facebook Changes Mean for Users

I knew Zuckerberg was young, but WOW…

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40+ funny Facebook comics

Follow the link to see the others…

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Facebook is Trampling Other Social Networks

Facebook Now Commands 41% of Social Media Traffic [STATS]

Ummm. Tell me again why I’d want to have a Facebook page? ;-)

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Creators and Curators

From my perspective, there are two main types of blog content; creation and curation…

“The idea behind curators and content curation is that there is such a flood of new content pouring through the Internet pipes these days that being aware of all of it and sorting it out in meaningful ways is simply not possible. Curators are people or organizations that do the hard work of sifting through the content within a particular topic area or “meme” and pulling out the things that seem to make most sense. This effort involves significantly more than finding and regurgitating links, though.” Source: Who are your curators? | Content curator | Digital Curator

You don’t have to ‘create’ original content in order have original blog content — you can curate content from other thought leaders for incorporation into your site. The content you aggregate from other sites [properly attributed, of course] along with your perspective is a public reflection of your brand as well! I rarely post anything without at least one quote from another thought leader — in fact, it’s usually those quotes [like the one in this post] that encourage me to weigh in on my blog in the first place. Where do you fall on this issue?

Top 10 passwords you should never use

For most people who experience a password hacker in real life, they find out too late that using a strong password is important.  Like the kid who think he is invincible and jumps off the roof because he doesn’t believe in gravity, having your website, Facebook account, or your system’s server hacked into is a lot like the ground smacking you in the face.  Gravity does exist and so do bad people who would love to gain access to your life and wreck havoc.

According to a report, most users still haven’t answered the call by security experts to implement more robust passwords. In fact, in a list of the most easy to hack passwords, simply typing ‘123456’ took a truly forgettable top prize.

Security firm Imperva recently released its list of the passwords most likely to be hacked based on 32 million instances of successful hacking. Imperva named their report “Consumer Password Worst Practices,” and some of the entries near the top are truly simple and could lead to theft or identity fraud.

Top 10 Worst Passwords
The following is a list of the most predictable passwords, and should not be used under any circumstances (Source: pcworld.com):

123456
12345
123456789
Password
iloveyou
princess
rockyou
1234567
12345678
abc123

Hopefully you don’t see your current password on the list, but if you do or don’t, it doesn’t really matter.  Most people have a simple enough password that it could be hacked by someone who knows what they are doing.  Even if you have a better than average password, you may be like the millions who a. never use it or b. use it for every account they own.  After all, who wants to remember all those passwords!

We’ve all received those Phishing emails from people trying to gain access to your various accounts, right?  Facebook, MySpace, Banks, and Twitter.  Well, if you fall for one of those emails and they figure out one password, they then check to see if you’re using the same password on the other sites too.

If you are using social media, most of your other accounts are visible to everyone so they can connect with you and that makes you vulnerable to getting hacked.

How to Strengthen Your Passwords
Other key findings in the report: it seems that almost 1 in 3 users choose passwords comprised of six or fewer characters; more than half use passwords based on only alpha-numeric characters; and almost 50 per cent used variations on their name, popular slang terms, or simple strings of consecutive characters from the average QWERTY keyboard — such as ‘asdfg’.

Imperva has made several obvious recommendations, suggesting most users adopt passwords with at least eight characters and to mix those characters between upper and lower case letters, numbers, and symbols. Passwords should be simple enough that they won’t be too easily forgotten, but the idea is to make cracking the code virtually impossible for either an unknown or known hacker.

About this article: Dennis Faas is the CEO and Chief editor of Infopackets.com: a daily, digital publication dedicated to MS Windows, computing, technology trends and solutions to real life computing issues: all written in simple English. Subscription to Infopackets Windows Newsletter is free. Visit us today! http://www.infopackets.com

So, how do you create a password that is easy to remember, unique for each account, and extremely difficult to hack?  I want to give you the answer! Leave a comment on this post and let me know what you think.  I’ll post the answer to the question soon.

Kirk Anderson
Guest Contributor

Kirk is owner of Interactive Business Solutions, a Business and Marketing Development Consulting company in Northwestern Wisconsin.  He works with small and medium size businesses to to implement technology solutions that help a business become more productive and profitable.  Interactive123.com

Socialize your email II

Recently, a good friend of the blog told me about a tool called Xobni that integrates ‘contextual social media’ with your inbox…

“There are a number of email plugins that look to give you contextual information about the person you’re communicating with. The first one I tried (and arguably the best I’ve seen) is Xobni, an Outlook plugin.

There’s now a similar plugin available for Gmail users called Rapportive. Rapportive replaces the ads you normally see in the right-hand sidebar with a profile of the person you’re emailing with that is automatically generated by searching online services for your correspondent’s email address. Rapportive is only available to users that are using either Firefox or Chrome as their browser, since Firefox and Chrome have a plugin architecture.” Source: Rapportive replaces Gmail ads with useful social information

Need to get up to speed on Xobni?

“Xobni is a plugin for Outlook that adds advanced search and social functions to the email client. When we last looked at Xobni, the service indexed your email messages and created personal profiles for each of your contacts by automatically extracing phone numbers and loking users up on LinkedIn. Now Xobni has rolled out an update that adds integration with Skype, Facebook, Hoovers, and Yahoo! Mail.

Here’s how it works. You can search for email using the Xobni sidebar. When you click on a message, Xobni will pull up information about the sender, including information from Facebook, LinkedIn, and Hoovers. If your contact’s Skype profile or phone number are available, you can also initiate a call with the click of a button.

In addition to searching your Outlook mail, you can also have Xobni index your Yahoo! Mail, although in order to reply to messages you’ll need to login to the Yahoo! Mail web interface.” Source: Xobni brings Skype, Facebook, Yahoo! integration to Outlook

I use and recommend both of these technologies. Questions? Feedback? Comment, call or contact me to discuss how this applies to YOU…

Kick Off Your Web Project the Right Way

I don’t normally post over here very often but since this is a busy week for Todd I figured I would share a few things.  Normally I blog about making beer and staying productive but lately I’ve been spending a lot of time exploring project management, web development and freelance contracting.

Today I want to share with you some tips for getting a good start on a web project.  For those lucky souls to have hired a web consultant, defined a project and implemented it flawlessly then don’t waste your lunch hour here.  Get on Facebook or Twitter or something else and enjoy your time.

For those of us who have had projects go south here are my top four (yes, only four – if you have a fifth please add it to the comments to share with the rest of us) tips to kick off a web project the right way.

1. Clearly Define the End Result
I’ve worked with a lot of clients that expressed some vague goals like “I want a website” or “I want to rank in the #1 spot on Google for a generic keyword”.  These are not good goals to give to a consultant (unless you have a lot of money to burn, in that case – email me…). Continue reading “Kick Off Your Web Project the Right Way”

Want to beta test my new course?

A couple of weeks ago, I announced that my “Social Media Academy” course would be available April 5. I’m looking for three to five beta testers to help me perfect the content. The course is very much still in it’s infancy stages, but I am looking for a few people who would like to participate in testing the course as I build it…

This course is mean to address what I feel is a huge gap in the social media space — there seems to be no shortage of strategists who are generating demand by describing the social media ‘promised land’ but they leave seminar attendees wondering how do they take the next step. My focus will be on the practical tactics and tools outlined in my series ‘Top 10 Tactics and Tools for Tightening your Tribe’. It is meant for solopreneurs, small business owners, organizational leaders or marketing professionals who want to add social media to their mix but still want to get home for supper. You know what I mean? No one has more time in their days — “how can I add social media and without adding hours”? is the thrust of the course.

In exchange for helping me beta test the course, the participants will of course get free access to the course materials as I create and publish them, as well as semi-private coaching and the opportunity to potentially earn some money by promoting the course as affiliates when I launch it. Questions? Feedback? Comment, call or contact me to get more details…

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