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Judy O'Connell

Mashable - The Social Media Guide - 9 views

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    "You don't have to be running for president to care about your online reputation. Almost everything you do online is easy to track, especially when you're using social media sites. This infographic shows you how to manage your "e-reputation," perhaps saving you some embarrassment, or even your career. Gathered by digital marketing firm KBSD, it's a treasure trove of tips, techniques and information about what companies and individuals are looking for inside your personal profiles and social information, and what you can do to show off your best side to those who might want to find out unflattering things about you. It's not too late to protect yourself and polish up your online image. So now that you've grown up (you have grown up, haven't you?), this would be a good time to do a bit of backtracking, cleaning up those mistakes you made in the past as much as you can, and at the same time, keeping an eye on your online behavior so there won't be anything to hide in the future."
Judy O'Connell

Search me: online reputation management | Technology | The Guardian - 4 views

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    "Online reputation management now accounts for 95% of his business. Initially, he worked exclusively with firms and brands, but these days 60-70% of Wadsworth's clients are individuals. "I did not anticipate that," he says."
John Pearce

The Innovative Educator: 4 things you need to know to help your students manage their o... - 17 views

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    "We often hear complaints about what students say and do online, but we often neglect to look into educators helping them manage their online reputation. This infographic is geared toward adults, but it can serve as a great starting point for conversations and activities that educators can engage in with students to help them to establish an active digital footprint that represents who they want to be perceived as online."
John Pearce

5 ways to save face online: dealing with criticism on social media - 1 views

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    "The internet can be a dark place. For businesses, a mismanaged customer complaint online can spell the end for a well-established reputation, especially if the results go viral. By learning to deal with trolls and dissatisfied customers, businesses can turn negative word-of-mouth into satisfied consumers. Here are six ways you can make the most of online complaints, and hopefully increase brand loyalty."
Judy O'Connell

How to fix your reputation online - 1 views

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    ""The treasure trove of personal data about each of us is growing to unanticipated levels, and the leak of huge portions of those data can be personally devastating"
John Pearce

Digital Compass | Common Sense Media - 5 views

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    "Learn the fundamentals of digital citizenship through animated, choose-your-own-adventure interactive experiences, designed for grades 6-9. Invite students to explore digital dilemmas, make good (and not-so-good) decisions, and try out possible solutions through stories and mini-games - all without risking their real-world reputations. Discover how Common Sense Education's award-winning digital literacy and citizenship curriculum seamlessly integrates into blended-learning environments. Coming soon as an iOS app, Android app, and Edmodo app!"
Julie Lindsay

Teens, Social Media, and Privacy | Pew Research Center - 0 views

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    Teens share a wide range of information about themselves on social media sites;1 indeed the sites themselves are designed to encourage the sharing of information and the expansion of networks. However, few teens embrace a fully public approach to social media. Instead, they take an array of steps to restrict and prune their profiles, and their patterns of reputation management on social media vary greatly according to their gender and network size. These are among the key findings from a new report based on a survey of 802 teens that examines teens' privacy management on social media sites
John Pearce

Online Tracking 101 - 14 views

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    Whether you like it or not, your internet activities are being monitored every time you log online. In this infographic you can learn more about who's tracking who....
John Pearce

The Privacy Fears of New Technology - 2 views

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    "We now live in a world where the topics of technology and privacy seem to work hand-in-hand. Gone are the days of buying a brand new TV or video game console where concerns of surveillance never existed. Now, our smart phones and tablets can act as TVs while tracking our location via GPS or wi-fi. The new batch of consoles set to come out later this year are both going to come with high definition cameras, with one of them confirmed to be active 24/7. Not only that, but now people are concerned about other possible emerging technologies such as facial recognition and thumbprint scanning. But are these fears warranted? Or are we simply becoming too paranoid and suspicious of companies and the technology they hand us?"
John Pearce

Big Data | Debunking Five Big Data Myths | Technology, IT - 5 views

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    "Kate Crawford of the MIT Centre for Civic Media goes behind the numbers to debunk five myths about big data."
John Pearce

Have you Googled yourself lately? If you're surprised, know online privacy takes effort... - 4 views

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    "Typing your own name into Google may be an eye-opening experience. Even if your personal information isn't easily accessible, your computer may be sharing information about habits, preferences and activities that you'd prefer to keep private. Here's how to keep a lid on what your computer shares about you with strangers."
John Pearce

Fix Tracking! - 1 views

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    Some advice from Duck, Duck Go on how to restrict tracking that can occur when browsing the web.
John Pearce

Online Now - YouTube - 7 views

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    "Journey into the world of contemporary online social interaction."
John Pearce

How to cover your tracks on the internet - 8 views

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    There are no secrets online. That emotional email you sent to your ex, the illness you searched for in a fit of hypochondria, those hours spent watching kitten videos (you can take that as a euphemism if the kitten fits) - can all be gathered to create a defining profile of you. Advertisement: Story continues below Your information can then be stored, analysed, indexed and sold as a commodity to data brokers who in turn might sell it to advertisers, employers, health insurers or credit rating agencies.
John Pearce

The road ahead for social media | Technology Spectator - 4 views

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    People are trading their privacy for influence! This irreversible global trend is shaping a communication battleground that will impact on every aspect of our future. The concept of relinquishing privacy is a scary proposition for many people, generally in loose correlation to their age. Similarly the idea of a profound change in societal influence is generating resistance and fear in traditional power centres and institutional mediators of meaning. Governments, corporations, media empires and a host of heritage institutions and their practices will change dramatically as contemporary forces shift the nature of influence.
John Pearce

Digital storm on the horizon - 8 views

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    "Michael Fraser calls it the ''rubbish web''. That is the internet we will be left with in five to 10 years unless governments and cyber corporations fix the holes that allow criminals to infiltrate the world wide web and strip global citizens of their identity, money and dignity, he believes. In his bleak view, those who can afford it will retreat behind private corporatised security walls."
John Pearce

Dark Nodes and Dodgy Connections; Dealing With Fake Followers « UK Web Focus - 3 views

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    "In a recent post I described how Social Media is About Nodes and Connections and explained "the importance [of] the network effect, with a growth in the number of nodes (the bloggers, the contributors, the Twitter users) leading to a growth in the number of connections (the posts, the comments, the tweets, the retweets) which help in the development of new insights and new ideas". But whilst many users of social media, including those working in higher education, are making use of such network effects to support their professional activities in legitimate and ethical ways others are seeking to exploit network effects in ways which may be considered unethical."
John Pearce

Google-Yourself-Challenge-800.png 800×3,599 pixels - 4 views

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    here is another very good reason for "Googling" yourself - to find out if any private and sensitive information about yourself and / or your family has ended up online somehow.  Maybe you accidently changed your Facebook privacy settings and your mobile phone number is now public? Or maybe a disgruntled former friend or colleague is bad mouthing you online?  Both of these scenarios have happened to me in the past and speaking from those experiences, I can assure you that these are things you need to be aware about right away so you can do something about it.  At the very least, too much information about you online can lead to a serious risk of your identity being stole
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