mobile

Mobile phones not smart about protecting privacy

Smartphones. More than 90 million people in the United States own them, and most are very attached to them. In fact, when smartphone owners were asked to choose between their smartphones and television, they told Edison Research in a recent study they preferred the phones.

And it’s our adoration of our phones that also puts us at risk. While the phones and their apps may entertain us and make it easier to communicate, they also take more of our personal information and privacy than we think.

Mobile app privacy is becoming a growing concern, and essential to understanding the issue is the knowledge that each cell phone has a unique identification number assigned to it. This number is basically a super cookie, to use the common Web browser term, and tracks what you look at on your phone.

Many apps collect and transmit data such as text messages, emails, phone numbers, stored contacts and even browser history, as well as any information users knowingly enter in the process of using the app. That information can be sold to third parties to help them better tailor ads to you, and customizing ads is how giants like Facebook and Google make their money since they don’t charge for their services.

While these apps aren’t sharing your name or phone number, they are sharing your profile, which is very valuable to marketing professionals. Many social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Path access the address books of smartphone owners to suggest friends who are also users of each service so you can connect with them.

Security researcher Ashkan Soltani, who has worked with the Federal Trade Commission and given testimony to Congress about mobile privacy, likens mobile apps to toddlers. While the word “smart” may be in smartphones, they aren’t that smart and like toddlers don’t understand etiquette or context. For example, a toddler hears you saying something unflattering about someone and then repeats that to the person the next time he sees him or her. Mobile operating systems are not yet mature enough to know what you want an app to be able to access versus what you want to keep private. The only data that smartphones really understand protecting is location.

Remember, apps for smartphones have only been around for less than five years. Soltani says the real issue is that the average user thinks smartphones are smarter than the gadgets actually are and proceeds to share information without realizing it. Also, Soltani said most apps and platforms don’t provide consumers with sufficiently detailed notices about how sensitive information will be collected and used.

So what can you do?

Read the terms of use: Read this information when you sign up for social media sites or prepare to download apps. Most people click through the legalese in their impatience to get started sharing and liking, said social media strategist Allen Mireles. Mireles said what we don’t read and don’t know can hurt us. Or at least surprise us.

Delete unused apps: Unused apps are still transmitting data. Also, regularly update the ones you do use. If you don’t, you’re not getting any of the security and privacy patches that developers might be providing.

The mobile app industry is still in the very early days of reaching a consensus on what should define privacy and security boundaries. As a user, you need to be aware.

This column was originally published in the Lexington Herald-Leader on Monday, March 26, 2012.

Ann Marie van den Hurk, APR, is an accredited public relations professional with over a decade experience bridging the gap between traditional public relations and emerging technologies. Need help reaching your business’s customers, call 302.563.992 to schedule an initial consultation, or contact Mind The Gap Public Relations.

Google+ is the next big thing for businesses

Written February 27th, 2012
Categories: internet privacy, marketing, mobile, newspaper column, small business, social media

Is Google+ a plus or minus for businesses?

Despite concerns about its popularity, the social network can be very beneficial for your company, if for no other reason than it offers you another search result.

After all, where do you go to search for something online? Google. What is the most used video sharing platform? Google’s YouTube. To where does your blog feed post? Google Reader. Google connects them all, searches them all and offers you a chance to better connect with your customers.

Launched last year, Google+ was initially viewed by many in the tech world as the slayer of Facebook, which has seen detractors concerned about privacy and clutter.

In its first month while still not available to all people, Google+ boasted 20 million users. To put that into perspective, it took Twitter and Facebook about three years to reach that number. Google+ was attractive because it offered a clean interface for connecting and sharing content, and users could tailor who they shared information with using the company’s innovative “circles” feature.

Fast forwarding from July, Google+ has now reached 90 million users. It’s still far behind Facebook and its 845 million users and Twitter and its 200 million, according to online data provider The Realtime Report.

So who are those Google+ users? At first glance, they seem to be predominantly tech-oriented men. But that’s changing. In a recent survey, Jim Long, founder of consultant Verge New Media, suggested men only slightly used the platform more than women. He also found that 36 percent of users post to their Google+ pages daily. Among his other findings were that 31 percent of users said they get considerably less response on Google+ than other social networks and 26 percent hear crickets.

With that in mind, is it worth it for your business to create a Google+ page, an offering that began in November?

Lexington-based Lexmark International launched a page last year and has been active ever since, posting about products as well as quirky events like the recent speech by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak to the company’s Perceptive Software subsidiary.

Being an early adopter of Google+’s business pages has allowed Lexmark to establish connections with early adopters and gain a positive presence, said spokesman Jerry Grasso, who feels the service is poised to be a successful alternative to Facebook in the future.

He said it’s a lot like the Kevin Costner film Field of Dreams. If Google builds it, the audience will come.

And as larger audiences spend time on the service, it shows that companies should have a presence since that’s where their customers are, said Mana Ionescu, president of Chicago-based social media company Lightspan Digital.

But that doesn’t mean it has to be a business page. A small business owner who is the face of the company could be better off just having an active personal page. You’ll be able to interact with more people and build relationships more quickly.

Building relationships is easier because Google+ is the best of Facebook and Twitter. You’re able to openly search for and interact with people like on Twitter but it’s visual like Facebook.

Ionescu also identified two unique benefits to Google+. First, Google search results now show the “+1” that’s similar to Facebook’s “Like” feature. Users can see if one of their friends shared your content on Google+, and most search results will show how many times the content received a +1.

Also, because of the “circles” feature that establishes groups, you can better target subsets of customers. You can share insider news with your circle of existing customers, but you can also share a special offer with only potential customers. This level of targeting is not available with any of the other social networks.

Ionescu interestingly points out most people compare Google+ with Facebook; when in fact, the social network is more like Twitter when it comes to interacting. The more you engage people by commenting and sharing their posts, the more you’ll find that they do it in return. If you just broadcast your own topics and miraculously expect audiences to find you, there will be nothing but silence.

Google+ also makes it easy to mention people and tag them to get them actively involved. Use that freely. This is very effective at getting people’s attention and starting conversations. Conversations are how engagement begins, so talk to people and they will talk back.

And you’ll find more and more of them in the future, because as Lexmark’s Grasso put it, Google+ is the field and people will come.

This was originally published in the Lexington Herald-Leader on Monday, February 27, 2012.

Ann Marie van den Hurk, APR, is an accredited public relations professional with over a decade experience bridging the gap between traditional public relations and emerging technologies. Need help reaching your business’s customers, call 302.563.992 to schedule an initial consultation, or contact Mind The Gap Public Relations.

© 2012 - Mind the Gap Public Relations, LLC.
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