Wednesday, February 26, 2014

The Overshare Generation: Eight Tips to Staying Safe on the Social Web


Today’s culture is an over-sharing culture.  Between Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, Foursquare, and numerous other social media tools at our disposals and on our personal devices, we are always connected and always sharing.  Our social calendar is on our social media.  While this has contributed to a smaller, more connected world, we must be aware of the new dangers that these sites and apps pose personally, financially, and professionally.  

Hackers can now easily access personal information that people willingly put out onto the Web.  People can put their thoughts out into the world in the span of a nanosecond.  Sensitive information and unpopular opinions can spread at a rapid pace with little to no control.  Social media is a whole new world and that presents whole new dangers.  In order properly practice and work within social media, you must learn how you can protect yourself and your organization.

Eight Tips to Keeping Safe
 
Here are eight major considerations one must take into account when dealing with social media privacy and policy:
  • Always be aware of your privacy settings: Social networking sites such as Facebook are constantly changing their privacy policies. You must keep on top of these security changes and track what your privacy and security settings look like in order to protect the information you share with friends and family from strangers and potential identity thieves.  ZDNet offers a helpful guide on how to properly lock down your privacy and security settings on Facebook by walking the user through “a crucial focus area of Facebook's settings, and will run through every single setting, option and feature available to users, to ensure that your privacy is as protected as it can be.” (Whittaker, 2011)
  • Avoid specificity: Social media is designed to share what you are doing, where you are doing it, and who you are doing it with.  However, this can be cat nip to potential identity thieves looking for whatever clues they can find about you through your social media accounts.  Avoiding specifics about your personal information, your daily schedule, and different aspects of your life can better protect you from those looking to exploit you.
  • Know what you are clicking on: Link shortening sites such as Bit.ly are useful, especially with the rising importance of micro-blogging.  However, these tools can often obfuscate the link’s final destination.  Hackers can exploit an innocent click, planting viruses or malware on your organization’s computer systems.  Always exercise caution and always know where you are clicking to.
  • Always pay attention to changes in the social media space:  New and exciting social media tools are being invented and popularized almost every day.  The social media user must always be aware of these emerging technologies and how they can be used against you and your organization.  Always be aware of how these new tools gather and disseminate your information and act cautiously.

  • Every organization is different.  What may have been allowable in one office may not be allowable at your next.  Knowing your specific organization’s social media policy (what is right or wrong, what is considered proper and improper communication) will help you avoid a lot of headaches and trouble in the future.
  • Just because your organization allows it, doesn’t mean you should be doing it:  The NLRB takes the position that broad policies that substantially limit social media communications may violate Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), which protects an employee’s right to engage in concerted activities for the purpose of mutual aid and protection” (Collins, 2012).  Just because the NLRB takes this position does not mean you should feel free to share whatever you want to the world.  Always exercise caution about what you are saying because it could harshly effect your work environment later on.
  • Know who you are speaking to:  As with everything communications: know your audience.  But in this specific context, be very aware of who you are speaking with, how they will take your content, and how that can affect you personally and professionally.  A funny joke to you and your friends may be considered offensive or disturbing to your co-workers and the public at large.
  • Post as if you are speaking in a public square:  If it’s not something you would say loudly in public, it’s probably best not to say it at all.  This can often be hard to understand when you are sitting by yourself in front of your computer or hand held device.  Social media presents itself as a bit of false intimacy, like a small conversation with friends, when it is really a large megaphone to the world.

What Privacy?

We are living our entire lives on the social web and an effect of that is our information and private opinions are up for grabs by anyone willing to listen.  While this can be a great connective tool, the dangers are too great.  It is up to the user what they decide to share and how they share it.  The responsibility lies with you.

This is an aspect of today’s digital culture that is going under recognized.   That is why it is vital for an organization to have a strong social media policy that can enforce and guide what is acceptable.  As an employee, everything we do can reflect on the organization we represent.  It’s not just thieves and hackers we have to worry about, it’s ourselves.
The story of Justine Sacco is just such a case.  The ex-PR exec shared an inappropriate joke about AIDS and Africa and the company she worked for ‘parted ways’ with her.  In the aftermath, they issued the following statement:    
“The offensive comment does not reflect the views and values of IAC. We take this issue very seriously, and we have parted ways with the employee in question.  There is no excuse for the hateful statements that have been made and we condemn them unequivocally.  We hope, however, that time and action, and the forgiving human spirit, will not result in the wholesale condemnation of an individual who we have otherwise known to be a decent person at core."

Proper social media training on the core principles and policies for the company could have avoided such a situation.  As the NLRB has clarified “individual employee rants…are not protected under the [National Labor Relations Act]…employees may be disciplined or terminated for engaging in such public rants” (Halpern & Gardner, 2012)We are putting too much of our lives on the web and each of the points I’ve listed above can help in stemming that tide, protecting ourselves from digital thieves, hackers, and even ourselves.

Do you think we as a culture are over-sharing or is it just certain groups and people that are guilty of it?  How can we lessen what we put of ourselves online or is already too late?


References



Collins, J. M. (2012, February 01). NRLB Report: Employers' Social Media Policies Must be Narrow, Must not Restrict Right to Engage in Protected Activities. Retrieved from The National Law Review: http://www.natlawreview.com/article/nrlb-report-employers-social-media-policies-must-be-narrow-must-not-restrict-right-t


Halpern, S. J., & Gardner, C. H. (2012, December 03). When is Your Company’s Social Media Policy an Unfair Labor Practice? Recent NLRB Decisions Offer Long-Awaited Guidance for Employers. Retrieved from National Law Review: http://www.natlawreview.com/article/when-your-company-s-social-media-policy-unfair-labor-practice-recent-nlrb-decisions-

Stelter, B. (2013, December 22). 'Ashamed': Ex-PR exec Justine Sacco apologizes for AIDS in Africa tweet. Retrieved from CNN: http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/22/world/sacco-offensive-tweet/

Whittaker, Z. (2011, September 4). September 2011: The Definitive Facebook Lockdown Guide. Retrieved from ZDNet:http://www.zdnet.com/blog/igeneration/september-2011-the-definitive-facebook-lockdown-guide/12641

10 comments:

  1. Hey Nash!

    I love your pictures. I think that they really add to your post. It is extremely well organized and easy to read. What are your thoughts on the Twitter Aids post? Do you think the company made the right choice in distancing themselves? I think that this is something companies are really dealing with right now so it is important that we grasp what is going on. There is no way a company would want to be associated with a racist joke and they need to make sure that the public knows it. Do you feel that you do a good job of keeping your accounts private?

    -Michele

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    1. Hey Michele,

      Thanks for the feedback! I think the company made the complete right call in this matter. First off, as a PR professional, Justine Sacco should have just known better. Twitter is not your private room with your close friends who know your sense of humor and personality. If she had set her privacy settings correctly, only those who she allowed to see her joke would have. This shows a carelessness in social media that her employers shouldn't be tolerating in the first place. The joke, and the story about the joke, was allowed to fester for so long that the company really had no other choice but to let her go. It was the right call.

      I have my own accounts set fairly openly. There are certain things I have kept private but overall, I want people seeing the things I post. I practice 'personal privacy'. Basically, if I don't want a large number of people knowing something about me, I do not post it or say it. I rarely, if ever, give very specific details about my own life. I also rarely put up a joke or comment that may in some way be controversial to any specific group or person. I just practice sensible caution which is becoming increasingly rare these days.

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    2. I completely agree with you that she should have known better, especially when she has a job of high stature. I too have my accounts pretty open but I do try to make sure that I do not post anything too personal. Someone can always find a way of looking at it. I also agree with you that taking caution online seems to be a thing of the past. Nice response!

      -Michele

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  2. Hi Nash - You make some great points about the importance of establishing security and privacy boundaries when engaging online.

    I especially like your line "our social calendar is on our social media." One of the reoccuring themes across many blogs this week is the importance of avoiding specificity, especially in terms of location. Knowing that social media has become largely "addictive" for our culture, what are some ways we can convince people to actually change these oversharing behaviors?

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    1. Hey Kristen,

      I think the video I put in my post is a great way to open people's eyes to what we are sharing everyday. I think when people are made aware of really how much cumulative information they are putting on the Web, it can become really scary and an impetus to change their behaviors.

      I think one way of changing this culture of oversharing is learning when to put your phones down. We are constantly connected and can always tell people when or what we are doing where it is happening at that moment. We aren't always aware of those GPS chips in our personal phones. Basically, it becomes more of a problem of how to get people aware of what they are sharing more than anything else. You are right that it has become an addiction and the best way to curtail an addiction is putting a mirror to the addict's face and telling them that they have a problem.

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  3. Hi Nash,

    Great post! Your example of the case with Justine Sacco really demonstrates the importance of several of the social media lessons we're learning about this week. You're definitely right when you stated in response to Michele, "First off, as a PR professional, Justine Sacco should have just known better. Twitter is not your private room with your close friends who know your sense of humor and personality." This touches upon using your privacy settings to your advantage, along with how you should always be speaking as if you're in a public square while on social media. Great point here.

    To answer your question, I think that as a culture we are definitely leaning more towards over-sharing versus keeping everything private. But there are still a create deal of people who are skeptic of social media, such a my mom and dad. Both a completely different generation to myself, they both a relatively new to Facebook and complain about seeing too much information from certain people in their news feeds. Needless to say, they rarely use their Facebook accounts. Do you think that the use of social media is a generational thing? And if so, do you see a difference in how they handle their privacy and safety settings?

    Your blog included all the right supporting elements like video links, and photos. I hope you get a lot of views! Great post!

    Nicole

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    1. Hey Nicole,

      It is definitely a generational thing, Nicole. I think people in my generation and those even younger have kind of grown up with social media as a regular thing in their lives. They don't think twice about posting whatever comes up in their mind or their lives. My parents are technologically-averse but I know when they peer over at my Facebook wall that they wonder how people could share so much.

      I think learning about social media security and privacy is going to have to become a prerequisite for high school students. I have seen information from my younger family members that shocks me that they would put online. This seems to be a recurring thing amongst younger people. They have grown up with this technology and now they see no boundaries between their real life and their digital life. Social media training needs to start long before these kids enter the workforce. I think it needs to start at home and in the schools.

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    2. Hi Nash,

      I couldn't agree more! I definitely believe a course like the one we're taking right now should be implemented in grade school. Younger generations are definitely guilty of over-sharing and I believe it could be because they've grown up using it and don't know or quite understand the repercussions that could come along with posting too much personal information online. I remember having a friend with an 8-year old brother that became more Facebook, Foursquare, and Twitter savvy than I was during my junior year of college. If children are growing up using such applications, they definitely need to be educated before it's too late and their over-sharing could become a threat to their families.

      Nicole

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  4. Hi Nash, you raise an important point. Securing oneself against computer hackers and thieves is not a one-time practice. As you mentioned, new social media tools are being created almost every day. Old tools are being updated and new malware is being created constantly. “A new variant of the Gameover malware that steals online banking credentials comes with a kernel-level rootkit that makes it significantly harder to remove, according to security researchers from Sophos” (Constantin, 2014).Social media users must ensure they are updating security measures regularly.
    Although social media policies differ from organization to organization, employee rights as represented in Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act do not. Employees should recognize their right to converse with each other about their workplace conditions. Employers must also acknowledge and respect this protected concerted activity.

    I like your advice of posting as if you are speaking in a public square. The effects of social media posts are viral and exponentially powerful. Your reference to the sense of false intimacy that social media provides really resonated with me. It is true, when messaging friends from the comfort and privacy of my home it is easy to forget the depth of exposure.

    I have had personal experience being hacked on Facebook and having my credit card information stolen. Since then, I have learned to think before I click and consider the security of websites before providing credit card information.

    By the way, I really like the background on your blog. It looks like a metaphor for transparency in social media.


    Constantin, L. (2014, February 28). Gameover malware is tougher to kill with new rootkit component. Retrieved from Computer World website: http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9246690/Gameover_malware_is_tougher_to_kill_with_new_rootkit_component

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    1. Hey Susan,

      Thanks for sharing your experience. That's terrible your credit card was hacked. I've had my e-mail and Twitter hacked to some extent in the past as well. It certainly makes you think twice about how you set up your accounts on the web and how to better protect yourself.

      Social media and the technology associated with it is constantly morphing and our security measures must evolve with it. Only a few short years ago, geo-tagging connected with our social media apps wasn't nearly as widespread as it is today. Who knows what potential security risks will be popularized in the next few years?

      After your credit card was hacked, what steps did you take with your security settings to better protect yourself?

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