Posts Tagged ‘Social Networking’

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Social Networking

April 25, 2009

LinkedIn

This video is created by Lee LeFever of Common Craft in Seattle and provides a simple explanation of this online networking service for professionals. I discussed this in Fall term, but it’s time to put services like this in to action! Start with the network of people you’ve met in this program and you may be surprised at the connections that spring forth from there. I’ve maintained connections with former students and colleagues going back as far as 1984 through LinkedIn.

BTW, Common Craft has dozens of short “Plain English” videos on topics ranging from Twitter to RSS to Phishing to Search Engine Optimizing. Worth a look.

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Privacy Issues with Online Social Networks

April 19, 2009

from Duboff Law Group LLC, Portland, Oregon

Do you post on MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn or other social networking sites?  A recent ruling by the Superior Court of Fresno County cautions Internet users about the lack of privacy inherent in the use of such sites.

The case involved a woman named Cynthia Moreno, who published a blog entry called “Ode to Coalinga” on her MySpace page, opening with the line, “the older I get, the more I realize how much I despise Coalinga,” and going on to criticize the California city and its residents.  When the principal of Coalinga High School found the Ode on MySpace, he forwarded it to the editor of the local newspaper and the newspaper published the Ode in its letters section.

The woman’s family still lived in Coalinga and claimed that as a result of the newspaper’s publication of the Ode, they received death threats and their home was shot at.  They also claimed that the father’s business lost so much money it had to be closed.  Morena and her family sued the principal and the school district as well as the newspaper and its publishers for invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

The appellate court noted that Moreno had “made her article available to any person with a computer and thus opened it to the public eye” and went on to say that “[u]nder these circumstances, no reasonable person would have had an expectation of privacy regarding the published material.”  The court pointed out that although Morena had used only her first name on her online journal, her identity was “readily ascertainable” from her MySpace page, which included a photograph of Moreno.

While most of us are aware that Internet postings are not private, this case serves as a reminder that unless your settings provide for limited access, you should be extremely careful when using social networking sites.

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