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Learning to Be Cautious While Using Social Media

Reblogger Roy Kelley
Industry Observer with Retired

Sacramento real estate professional and ActiveRain blogger Myrl Jeffcoat offers some advice for those that are using social media.  

 

"If you want to talk or brag about your vacation or trips, wait until you return home." 

 

It is risky to discuss your travel plans or current trip on Facebook or other public sites.  There will be plenty of time to share your experience when you return.  

 

Please go to the original blog if you wish to make comments that will be seen by Myrl.

 

Original content by Myrl Jeffcoat

 

 

As the days pass and folks continue to become more enamored with social media, I sometimes feel the need to unplug from the matrix, and step outside my door.  I’m checking to make certain “real” people still exist, and that I haven’t been sitting in front of my computer monitor conversing with dead people via avatar or hologram. 


It is amazing how much personal information is found on Facebook and the other social media sites.  With kids there is a great deal to be concerned about!.  But with an over abundance of information is dished out and served up, risk exists for us all!

 

Granted, we are given the option of choosing our friends on Facebook.  And we have some control over which entities will have access to our more personal aspects in cyber space.

However, things can change among friends, and we don't always know well, some of those folks we accept as "friends."

 

One of the primary dangers that I often see proliferated on profile pages is the providing of a full birth date.  I know folks sometimes like to be wished well on their special day, but providing birth date information should be reconsidered.

Here are things to should consider if you are using social media including Facebook, Twitter, etc.,

(1) It's probably ok, to provide the month and day you were born.  However, providing the year you were born gives identity thieves a piece of key information for stealing your financial life.  Couple that with the knowledge of your place of birth, and sometimes identity thieves can predict some of the numbers in your Social Security number, if not most or all.

(2) Be wary of providing your home address.  Ponemon Institute has conducted a study, which found that Social Media users were at risk of identity theft because of information they were providing on their social sites.  Others were actually putting themselves at physical risk.  The study found that most contacts that had been accepted as "friends" were actually just acquaintances or people they knew - some only slightly.

 

(3) If you want to talk or brag about your vacation or trips, wait until you return home.  Telling the world that you're going to be gone for 2 weeks cruising the Bahamas, or wherever, is telling thieves, "Come rob me."

 

(4) Passwords are another area that needs serious consideration.  If you use the same password for just about every on-line activity you perform, you are at risk.  If you are using your mother's maiden name, or other predictable criteria, you're making it easy for crooks to guess your passwords. 

 

(5) And, suggesting that passwords have 8 characters including a capital, doesn't mean you should choose, "sneezy - sleepy - dopey - doc - happy - bashful - grumpy - and sacramento" either.  Only we blondes are allowed to do thatJ

 

(6) One of the more important things to consider is what you decide to put out in cyberland, has the potential of being looked at by future or current employers, school admissions people, and other entities that may not think it is funny, that you love to party down and get drunk every weekend, or recreationally smoke the "funny stuff." 

 

If you use a few good sense precautions, you ought to remain reasonably safe, while exploiting the wonderful possibilities available through social networking.  The key is to remain cautious and to use care.

 

Posted by

Roy Kelley, Retired, Former Associate Broker, RE/MAX Realty Group

Gaithersburg, Maryland  

Myrl Jeffcoat
Sacramento, CA
Greater Sacramento Realtor - Retired

Thanks for the reblog, Roy!  It is greatly appreciated!  I hope you are enjoying your weekend!

Aug 06, 2017 11:54 AM
Roy Kelley
Retired - Gaithersburg, MD

Make it a habit to post a daily reblog. It is an easy way to pay it forward.

Aug 13, 2020 10:31 AM