Social Media Literacy

Subtitle: WYB – Watch Your Back in social media!!!

As netizens connect and grow, so do more unsavory individuals look to take advantage of those communications.

Having a background in technology, I’ve seen many cases of users unknowingly causing computer problems which easily could of been prevented if they new more about the computer environment.

With this in mind, imagine what can happen to an individual who unknowing falls prey to a computer virus or a phishing attempt, that could of been prevented if the knowledge of the characteristics of such attacks could of been recognized.

Social Media Literacy (SML), permits us to identify such threats.

SML goes beyond the knowledge of  pushing your content through different social media channels; it involves the critique of received media.  If media literacy broadly applies to digital media,  then SML would be specific to social media platforms.

Tips

Here are some suggestions for Twitter:

- If you see many of your friends sharing the same strange new Twitter icon, or tweeting the same strange message, it’s probably a hoax, or they’ve already fell victim to one.

- Be weary of tweets that contain news or calls to action, without having links.  This may be a prank/hoax, and the joke may be on you.

Robin Hood airport is closed. You’ve got a week and a bit to get your shit together, otherwise I’m blowing the airport sky high!!

- If tweet contains all CAPS or multiple symbols, take heed!

- “Think before you click.”  Is this too good to be true?  Do you know the user?

- Mouseover the link and make sure you can verify the link (enable status bar in most web browsers).  If you can’t see it, or the link looks like bad news (IP number, instead of URL), the WYB!

- Does the persons tweets have a lot of links in many of them?  They have an incessant need to get you somewhere.

I can count on one hand how many times I’ve used the ‘block’ feature on Twitter.  This is because, I spend so much time on the internet that I’ve developed a heightened awareness of what looks right and what looks suspect, so I don’t spend too much time blocking people from my feed…I just unfriend them.

If someone is trying to take advantage of others, and you want to take the extra step then, submit their name to Twitter Help for investigation.

Has anyone experienced, or have more suggestions for Twitter or any other site?

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  • http://www.admentis.com Miguel

    I’ve not experienced anything like this in my short time on twitter but have heard horror stories from others. Thanks for the tips.

  • http://louispagan.com Louis Pagan

    Sure, no problem. I’ve seen all of them except the exceptional hoax type of incident.

    Thanks for commenting, I appreciate that…

  • http://www.latinabellablog.com Aimee ~ @LatinaBella

    Interesting article. I have actually experienced a few of these! I had a couple of different people following me on twitter that had the exact same profile pic! I thought it seemed fishy, so I unfollowed them. And I typically don’t follow any links that people post. Again, great post.

  • http://louispagan.com Louis Pagan

    @Aimee ~ @LatinaBella
    Ah, I’ve seen that…you’d think that would be too obvious to even try.

    Thanks for adding that.

  • Orietta

    I just got a trojan virus when trying to login into a radioblog link from Twitter … spent the whole day cleaning it up and re-loading my .exe files … nightmare. Thanks for sharing these tips as well … helps to be aware.

  • http://louispagan.com Louis Pagan

    @Orietta
    Yikes! That’s terrible…I will stay away from RadioBlog. Glad you got it back up and running.

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  • Janet

    Yes, I’ve seen some strange stuff like this. Now I know.

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