Monday, December 03, 2007

Public Image Profiling: How Others Find What About You



More frequently, BNI is being requested to conduct public image profiling - searches to uncover a subject's (or one's) personal information, that which is readily available online. Beyond verifying the usual identifiers (address, DOB, phone number...), given the proliferation of user-generated content and social and business networking sites, a potential employer or partner can often obtain an alarmingly unfiltered profile of their candidate. For obvious reasons, this information is invaluable to just about every public, private or governmental sector industry that relies on its public image to operate effectively.

We've developed several public image profiling site checklists (each containing from 45 - 102, and counting, sites) , dependent on the requestor's needs, all of which include the below basic searches:

General: Google.com, Yahoo.com(check subcategories: Web, Images, Video...)

Social Networks: .Bebo.com, Broadcaster.com, Classmates.com, Facebook.com, Friendster.com, Meetup.com, MySpace.com,Reunion.com, Tagged.com, Twitter.com, 360.yahoo.com.

Business Networks: LinkedIn.com, Plaxo.com, Spoke.com, Naymes.com.

Blogs: Technorati.com

Site Ranking: Aside from your Google PageRank, Alexa.com, is an excellent source of business information.

Again, these are the basic sites to search to form a public image profile - or research one's own Netface.

Public image profiling is the new credit report.

Stay safe,

Lina

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Monday, November 26, 2007

Recover Lost or Deleted Files - FREE & ASAP



We recently experienced the necessity to recover tons of lost, deleted, virused-out and buggy data. Backstep: Allow me to preface today's Bulletin with "I'm writing this issue instead of our resident IT expert, Jonathan Caspian." (When IT guys insist on NO COMMUNICATION WITH THE OUTSIDE breaks, perhaps it should give us all a heads up to disconnect from our tech-driven world every so often.) Nonetheless, my writing this tech-specific issue should boost the credit given to this week's recommended product.

RECUVA. (Pronounced recover. We're not certain but that name smacks of having come from east of Mineola.) Recuva.com is a fanastic little find. This FREE Windows-based application restores files that have been accidently deleted or lost due to a virus or whacky bug. (And, while I'm sure the telecoms will disagree, be very careful with DSL installations. This type of broadband connection seems to inherently come with weird glitches that are responsible for destabilizing Windows OSs and wiping out key data. )

The audio on the vid clip may be somewhat difficult to follow, but it is accompanied by tight visual instructions.

Recuva.com. It works and it's free.

BNI Operatives: Street Smart: Web Savvy.

Stay safe,

Lina

Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,