Facebook Frictionless Sharing - Good or Bad Thing?

Watching YouFace­book has been rolling out a lot of updates over the past few months. Their lat­est is by far the one cre­at­ing the biggest stir and most dis­cus­sion. It is described as ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing’ and changes how apps you have sub­scribed to inter­act with your Face­book wall.

What is Fric­tion­less Sharing?

When you visit a blog or web­site, if you’ve enabled an app access, FB (Face­book) can auto­mat­i­cally post their con­tent to your wall. No more click­ing the ‘Like’ but­ton. No more copy­ing and past­ing links. Depend­ing on the app and the set­tings avail­able, you will no longer have the of choice to share or not. When you visit their site to read an arti­cle, or lis­ten to a tune (for exam­ple) the arti­cle you are read­ing or tune you are lis­ten­ing to will be shared automatically.

Dif­fer­ent apps have dif­fer­ent set­tings avail­able and I have read that some allow more con­trol than oth­ers. Some allow you to turn auto­matic shar­ing off. Unless an app gives me this option, it will be deleted. Cer­tainly from a mar­ket­ing point of view there is enthu­si­asm for ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing’ with no wait­ing for ‘Likes’ and ‘Shares’ so many apps (I sus­pect) will not add the ‘off switch’ initially.

Pri­vacy Concerns

If you do a search on ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing’ you will find many folks have pri­vacy con­cerns with this new fea­ture.  Their con­cern is this is a new even higher level of intru­sion of con­stant sur­veil­lance of our every move on the Inter­net. I per­son­ally share this con­cern and do not like the fea­ture even though as a busi­ness we could find ways to take advan­tage of it.

Let’s face it, we are being tracked around the Inter­net already with cook­ies unless we browse using stealth mode. Every­one wants to know our buy­ing habits, tastes, Geo loca­tion so they can serve us tar­geted con­tent. It’s like going to a mall where they know what you bought on your last visit, change the ‘On Sale’ item to attract you based on your buy­ing his­tory, greet you by name and ask you if you plan on hav­ing a Taco at the ‘Food Fair’ again this visit…

Mmmm… Cook­ies are Good!

Cook­ies are not inher­ently bad. They help us do many things more eas­ily on the Inter­net. It’s more about what a par­tic­u­lar cookie is being used for. Dis­cussing cook­ies more fully is beyond the scope of this topic but if you want to under­stand how much we rely on them, try turn­ing them off in your web browser pref­er­ences or select­ing the option to be prompted to accept a cookie instead of accept­ing them auto­mat­i­cally. Have fun try­ing to get many of your favorite sites to open! Dis­abling cook­ies will seri­ously dimin­ish your brows­ing enjoyment.

As I have men­tioned, there is a ton of Buzz about this if you search the term ‘Fric­tion­less Shar­ing Face­book’. This one at PC world was at the top of my search and I found it eas­ier to under­stand than many of the more tech­ni­cal ones:

http://www.pcworld.com/article/240592/facebooks_frictionless_sharing_a_privacy_guide.html

A few thoughts to fin­ish with

Bot­tom line is the best advice one can fol­low is to use due dili­gence prior mak­ing a deci­sion to  install an app or not.  Do you really need this app? What does it add to my life? Does it want to take con­trol of my web­cam and record me lip-syncing badly to Adele — Rolling in the Deep, then post to com­edy site?

More time worn and cliched advice… Read the fine print.

Last but not least. Log out of Face­book when you are brows­ing other sites. Doing so is no guar­an­tee FB is not watch­ing your every move, but at least it may not hit your wall.

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Do You Recommend A Service And Send An Affiliate Link To Your Client?

Most busi­ness own­ers have signed up as an affil­i­ate for ser­vices they use and trust.  We have and do. 

When we have a client that needs a par­tic­u­lar ser­vice that we use, and believe in, we tell our clients of this ser­vice and pro­vide our affil­i­ate link (with dis­clo­sure) assum­ing that we will get a com­mis­sion for this offer­ing if they choose to use that service.

Do you do this and think you will receive commission?

Think again.

We offered an affil­i­ate link to a client for a ser­vice we highly rec­om­mend, and we use, which our client signed up for.  We dis­cov­ered we were not paid com­mis­sion and checked into it.  We were told:

If some­one clicks on an affil­i­ate link after yours then they get the com­mis­sion. <quote> last affil­i­ate link clicked is the one that gets the sale. <end quote>

This started me think­ing.  So, you rec­om­mend a ser­vice to your client.  You explain the ben­e­fits, also explain that it is an affil­i­ate link, and send them off. 

If they don’t sign up, so be it.  But if they do and you don’t get the com­mis­sion then what hap­pened.  Well here is some of my think­ing from the quote above.

If you rec­om­mend a ser­vice and the client wants to check on reviews well they can land on a site that has embed­ded affil­i­ate links (most don’t have dis­clo­sures).  Sup­pose they like the review and they click on the link of the ser­vice name. They may not even real­ize that their action of click­ing on a sim­ple link of the ser­vice name is going to delete your cookie. 

It sure never occurred to me,

So, do you offer affil­i­ate links to your clients and assume you will be prop­erly com­pen­sated for the refer­ral IF the client signs up for the service? 

Think again.

Likely you have lost in commissions.

What can we do?  Not sure there is any answer at this point but wanted to alert you to this issue.

If I find any answers I will post them here.  If you have any sug­ges­tions please share.

 

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Independent Business Owners Are Not Borg

Resistance is futile...

Most peo­ple plan­ning an impor­tant event, such as wed­ding (for exam­ple), would never con­sider wait­ing until the last minute to book a caterer, rent tuxe­dos, buy a wed­ding dress, make arrange­ments for a florist or to book a recep­tion hall. Book­ing well in advance is advised and in fact, a must for secur­ing many pro­fes­sional ser­vices. They will not be avail­able otherwise.

The same is true when sched­ul­ing work with an inde­pen­dent busi­ness owner / entre­pre­neur that you have con­tracted to do work with.

If a client waits until too close to dead­line to advise need­ing the work done there can be a sched­ul­ing prob­lem. (This is where I get to the Borg part). Some­times there is an assump­tion that once con­tracted it is just a mat­ter of idling away in the back­ground await­ing ‘a command’.

Inde­pen­dent busi­ness own­ers / entre­pre­neurs do not work with a sin­gle client. Inde­pen­dent busi­ness own­ers / entre­pre­neurs can­not sit at their computer/phone/blackberry just wait­ing for work  None of us would sur­vive if we did this.

In our own busi­ness we pride our­selves at always do our best to ‘drop every­thing’ when it is an emer­gency and hav­ing a fast turn­around time. Even so, like other pro­fes­sion­als ser­vices, like your­selves, we need to sched­ule our work / your work. To keep our busi­ness suc­cess­ful we need a full sched­ule to prosper.

To all our suc­cesses —  (we will not be assim­i­lated :-)

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Securing Your WordPress

In our two pre­vi­ous posts I talked about being hacked,  what to do after if you site has be com­pro­mised and how to get cleared with Google if they have blocked vis­i­tors because of mal­ware found on your site.

This post talks about how to make your Word­Press as secure as possible.

Word­Press has good secu­rity built in. Their team of devoted and very tal­ented pro­gram­mers are con­stantly work­ing to stay ahead of the bad guys. Even so, being such a pop­u­lar soft­ware makes it a tar­get so it’s impor­tant to be proac­tive in keep­ing your Word­Press as safe as possible.

Be Vig­i­lant

You can’t phone up an alarm com­pany and have them put in motion detec­tors, door and win­dow strips, so what do you do? There are sev­eral things you can do and plug-ins you can install or have your web per­son help you with.

  • check your site’s secu­rity for vulnerabilites
  • lock down your site as best you can
  • mon­i­tor changes to your site that you have not made
  • scan your site for mali­cious files (dis­cussed in our last two posts)
  • and also scan for viruses

A plug-in to check your site’s secu­rity for vulnerabilities

Ulti­mate Secu­rity Check

http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/ultimate-security-check/

This plug-in scans you site and makes rec­om­men­da­tions then pro­vides set­tings you can tog­gle on or off.

There are oth­ers plug-ins you can find and most require ‘set­tings’ deci­sions you might need help with. They gen­er­ally have default set­tings you can safely apply with­out blow­ing up your site. But… There is never a guar­an­tee you won’t encounter a prob­lem because there are so many dif­fer­ent web server con­fig­u­ra­tions… So be care­ful! Always do a back-up first (another topic and another plug-in).

Lock down your site as best you can

Unless you are an advanced user, you will need help with this task and so I’m going to keep my expla­na­tion brief… Hack­ers often look for files and fold­ers on your site with per­mis­sion set to allow them to be edited. For exam­ple your footer file and other theme files. Remov­ing ‘write’ per­mis­sions on these files will make it harder for hack­ers to inject code into your site. Explain­ing how to do this is beyond is beyond the scope of this post and if you don’t know how, we rec­om­mend you get help.

Lock­ing down your theme files is a pain and not many folks go to this extreme but it does make your site more secure and you will have to judge your­self whether the extra work it causes is worth it.

This post is get­ting on the long side so I’ll stop here for now and dis­cuss the other list items (above) another night…

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Submitting your site for a review at Google Webmaster Tools

In our last post we wrote about a mal­ware script we have been deal­ing with the past cou­ple of weeks. That it was being injected into Word­Press footer files and how to remove it.

If you find this quickly and deal with it, there is min­i­mal impact to your site. But if you don’t dis­cover it quickly, you could end up on Google’s ‘Attack Site’ list and they will block vis­i­tors from vis­it­ing your site.

Curi­ous about your site’s health sta­tus? Google has a tool for check­ing to see if there are any prob­lems with your site. Replace the last part of this link with your domain they will show you a report:

http://www.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?site=yoursiteurl.com

Right now we’re going back to our topic for this post… How to sub­mit your site to Google after you have cleaned up fol­low­ing a mal­ware attack.

First thing you are going to need is an account at Google Web­mas­ter Tools.

http://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/

Once you have an account set up, you will need to add a web­site. There’s a but­ton for this promi­nently dis­played on the index page. Click on it and you will be offered a field to enter your site url. I usu­ally have this on my clip board ready to paste in.

Next they will require you ver­ify own­er­ship the site. There are sev­eral dif­fer­ent meth­ods offered. You can add a meta tag they pro­vide or down­load an html file, which you then upload to your site. This fast and easy as long as you have an FTP pro­gram or web site author­ing tool with file trans­fer set up. Explain­ing how to use these is beyond the scope of this post and if you don’t how to do this, you are some­one who should have pro­fes­sional help.

Once you have uploaded the google html file or inserted the meta tag into your home page header, go back to the Google Web­mas­ter tools page [still open I hope!] and hit the ‘ver­ify site’ button.

There are var­i­ous things you can look at in Web­mas­ter Tools but we in there for a par­tic­u­lar rea­son at the moment. We want to get our site pro­nounced healthy and open to vis­i­tors again. To do this, look for the ‘diag­nos­tics’ link on the left side bar. Click­ing will expand the menu. The ‘mal­ware’ link take you to a page with an alert that your site is blocked. Here is where you will be able to sub­mit your site and add a lit­tle mes­sage about what you have done to clean out the malware.

That’s all there is to it. It’s not hard but then we do this for a liv­ing. If you need help with this or some­thing else on your site that is beyond your tech­ni­cal com­fort level. Con­tact us!

Happy Trails,

Billy

PS -  Next post we’ll talk about a few plug-ins to help with security.

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