-
Website
http://whitneyhess.com/blog -
Original page
http://whitneyhess.com/blog/2008/04/how-bebo-ruined-my-life/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
rorowe
4 comments · 2 points
-
sandieman
8 comments · 1 points
-
Dave Friedel
7 comments · 4 points
-
Matt J McDonald
5 comments · 1 points
-
Lisa Rex @lisarex
6 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Take our Twitter survey for a chance to win a $200 Amazon gift card
3 weeks ago · 4 comments
-
Take our Twitter survey for a chance to win a $200 Amazon gift card
While I feel your pain, probably a lot more due to shoulder/back injuries, this has been documented. One of IxDA's events held at Method someone was talking about "Ethics" in our 'connected-world'.
Unfortunately, not all companies have the sense of mind and respect to well, respect you and your privacy.
The funny thing is, if you read their TOS you probably agreed to even allow them to name your first born.
-- it was Andrew Green from AARF who presented "Mind your manners" it doesn't address your problem, but it talks about our challenges (after all, when we listen to Marketing folks and their amazing ideas - it's our fault if we implement it) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pbvoV141ldA&...
eo
You just need to get over it.
Not like youve given them your home adress.
You can just make a new account, set it to private and get on with your life.
And add the email addresses seperatly.
http://b.rox.com/2008/10/14/frustrated-with-bebo/
I retained my Bebo account and used it to post a cautionary note.
In the social network competition, Bebo lost my mindshare.
about you and what your doing
really... wow that was all you could offer? why even post, I mean I am sure your well thought out and witty response probably took you most of the morning to think of, but come on.
Maybe next time you can use that time doing something a bit more productive, and not so negative... like growing up.
Sure, maybe all it will do is download my addressbook and send an invite, but with access to my gmail account, it also has access to all of the information in all of the messages retained by gmail. Now, in this case that's not so bad—you're not sending mail through gmail, so probably you've already seen the worst that could happen from this incident.
What happens when some disgruntled employee at Facebook or Bebo or Social Networking du Jour decides to make the software raid a user's mail account and forward every message to everyone in the address book? It hasn't happened yet, that I am aware, but it's only a matter of time until it does.
In short, if you want to send an invitation via a social networking site, compose the email yourself and send it manually. Don't trust the sysadmins to be honest; 99.9% of them are, but .1% is still a really big number when your reputation is at stake.
Thanks for helping to raise awareness!