Hijacked By Social Media

Computerworld A bizarre case of social networking coming up against local police has arisen in Massachusetts, where a 32-year-old Beverly man was jailed because Google+ sent an email using his name without his knowledge. Turns out Google+ sent it to the man's former fiancee, who had a restraining order against him, prohibiting all contact.

Now that must have been an interesting conversation with police. "No, Officer, honest. I didn't send it. The social networking site I use sent it, all on its own. Funny, huh? [Pause] No, the handcuffs aren't too tight." A Massachusetts judge is now trying to clean the case up.

Although that example is certainly extreme, Google+ is far from the only company that wants to send messages on behalf of customers without their knowledge. When Starbucks announced a program with Twitter late last year, it required customers to link their Twitter and Starbucks accounts. Why? "By linking your accounts, you authorize Starbucks to access your Twitter account and post on Twitter on your behalf. If your Twitter account settings are set to 'protected,' you will need to go to Twitter and change this setting in order to send an eGift using the Program."

Both Facebook and LinkedIn also seem to send out missives in their users' names and without their knowledge. Facebook users have been complaining about friend requests going to people they never invited, and LinkedIn participants have at times learned that invites had gone out under their name without their knowledge.

The social sites usually say that such automatic behavior was accepted by their users, who didn't object when notified. But the notifications are in teeny-tiny print that goes unnoticed in routine email alerts ostensibly about something inoffensive, if not downright boring. You know the kind of thing I'm talking about: "We are thrilled to tell you today -- in this 19,000-word email -- about why we chose this shade of blue for our homepage. Let's go through a detailed analysis of every other shade that we considered." With a start like that, not many people are going to get to the part 20 pages in where the company casually slips in something actually worth knowing, such as, "In the unlikely event you ever say the word 'like' between noon and 11 p.m. EST, you have signed over all of your worldly possessions to us." Or that the company will be contacting the users' friends, families and business associates to do a little marketing in the users' names.

Continue Reading

Original post:
Hijacked By Social Media

Related Posts

Comments are closed.