Online Brand Abuse Continues To Grow
Online brand abuse of many of the world's most popular brands increased in 2008, according to a new report from MarkMonitor. The…
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Online brand abuse of many of the world's most popular brands increased in 2008, according to a new report from MarkMonitor. The…
Google’s seemingly automatic trust of popular social media sites like Twitter, Facebook, and Wikipedia make all of them—and by default, you, the end game—a target of spammers, scammers, and hackers. Combine that trust with Twittter’s foray into realtime search, and you’ve got yourself some spammer’s delight.
Aaron Greenspan, a man known mostly for his legal issues with Facebook, recently sued Google when his account was shut down and payment of $721 he was due from pubslishing Google Ads was halted. One day Greenspan received an email from Google saying:
An Illinois sheriff wants Craigslist to stop making it so easy to catch prostitutes. Apparently it just gives him a lot more work than he can handle.
At Econsultancy today, Editor-in-chief Chris Lake is putting social media measurement into perspective: The key with social media measurement, I think, is to stand back and take a widescreen approach to measurement.
Before we get started I need to tell you that I will need to fight a strong bias here to write about the issue of health records online. I have some background in the use, power and neglect of medical records from my days in the insurance business.