Anyone can edit your Facebook company page
…no really they can!*
Find a Facebook page with location information (ie one you can “check in” to) for which you are not an admin, click on the info tab on the left hand side and you should now see “edit” appear in the top right – OMG OMG!! etc etc…
*ok so actually they can’t, but be prepared for customers to THINK that’s what is now possible…
During one of the recent changes to Facebook places, they felt it would be handy if anyone could “suggest” updates to the location information only.
From the Facebook pages FAQ: “On Pages that list an address and choose to display a map in the Info section, anyone viewing the Page sees an “Edit” link. This link allows people to notify Facebook of any location information that may be missing. Note that people aside from Page admins can’t edit the information that displays on your Page even though the link is labelled “Edit.”"
And breath… Facebook love making these changes, they certainly keep me… “entertained”.
If you want to switch off this “editable” (note, it’s not actually editable) information, as an admin, select: Edit Page / Basic Information / untick the box labelled: Show this map.
Read MoreMy thoughts on when to fwd, RT, re-post etc
This week has been a busy one for Bournemouth, hitting the headlines for a couple of the wrong reasons:
- The flash flooding
- The tragic loss of a red arrow at the airshow
We’ve also seen what has been dubbed as the “Schrodinger’s dictator” (conflicting reports of Gadaffi being alive and dead), which in a similar way closer to home also occurred with the red arrows pilot: some saying he was rescued alive by dog walkers, whilst others that he died on scene.
Add to this the false reports of riots doing the rounds on social networks and I felt a blog post was in order.
My thoughts in no particular order on when to RT / FWD or re-post:
- Please THINK before you post – it’s to easy to get caught up in the “first, first, first!” online culture.
- Forwarding unconfirmed rumors can become self-fulfilling (as I’m sure was partly the case with some riots around the UK). I saw (and due to past involvement in radio, started receiving phone calls!) a growth in rumors that the McDonalds in Bournemouth was on fire… having walked past it only 5 minutes earlier, I was quick to point out it most definitely was not to those asking me and subsequently onto twitter & Facebook.
In the case of the pilot, whilst mainstream media was careful to state the situation of the pilot was unclear, many were saying he was alive – while I’m generally an optimist, imagine what his wife would of been going through if she’d been anxiously scouring the web for news…- Consider the reliability of your sources – having a large number of followers does not necessarily make you either a reliable, or authoritative source – exhibit A: @queen_uk – a lot of people were RT’ing a post from a twitter account with a following in the ten of thousands, a quick look at it’s history made it clear it was a barely reliable (or literate!) source.
- Rule 32 of the internet: “Pics? or it didn’t happen” – if someone states something as fact, challenge them to provide proof, if in doubt don’t re-post or clearly label it as unconfirmed/unreliable.
- Use NSFW if the item you are forwarding is Not Safe For Work! (As a rule of thumb, if I wouldn’t share it with my mother, it’s NSFW).
- Remember not everyone loves: LOLcats / motivational saying / Jokes…
What would you add to the list?
Read MoreWhy sell mobile apps when a mobile web site would be better?
The short answer: we’re in business to make money.
I had a discussion on twitter yesterday, prompted by a question someone asked me last week: what would I learn/master if I was a student or job seeker today?
I’d focus on mastering html5 and building for mobile first then web.
Personally, I think we will soon be at a place where we develop for mobile first (tablet or phone) and web browser second, I agree with @iangeek when he says that’s not as true for b2b though.
A couple of folks said they’d focus on gis (ie location based), which is a good call also.
I think, as an industry, we’ve been guilty at times of mis-selling apps when a good mobile web site would do the job.
Lets be honest, if a client says ‘I want an app’ we see dollar signs, it costs money to build an app properly… And that’s the problem, in most cases a well built mobile web site would be cheaper to develop and platform independent (great you have an iphone app, what about the larger user base of android? Or blackberry business users? Let alone new platforms like windows phone 7 or the new one from alibaba)… but that is worth less and not what the client asked for is it?
This is the crux of the issue, we should be doing more to sell people the right solution, the one that gets the best ROI and the widest coverage… Not just the one that makes us the most money.
Read MoreNon-plussed by Google Plus?
Summary:
Too early to tell. If you’re not an “early adopter” type, don’t waste time looking at it just yet.
UPDATE: The early adopter phase is growing rapidly, as of today 03/08/11 the user base is 25 million and growing, time on the site per user is increasing too… have a look personally, ready for the business pages launch.
Main body:
Another google product, another twitter stream full of “invite wanted PLEASE!” type messages… I was lucky to get on quite early and shared the wealth as soon as I could.
Initial gut feeling… I like it. I like the use of circles, an idea that I’ve always sort of used on facebook with the friends lists feature… which is horribly clunky. This however works REALLY well, I like it a lot. It will take some discipline to add everyone into circles to start with, but once you have, it’s a simple way of sending messages to certain groups of people.
The people themselves don’t know the name or membership of a circle, just that they got that message from you.
What about business pages?
Good question, at the moment it is only for personal pages, businesses will get additional functionality but there isn’t any more info than that at the moment.
Is there a mobile app?
Yes and the android one is pretty good, the iphone one has been submitted to the app store, but as of today not live on itunes.
I totally agree with Scobelizers article that “your mum wont use it”… yet. I think it’ll be interesting to see whether the changes at Facebook announced this week deaden some of the impact google plus has (especially the video chat “huddle” feature)
It is still in a beta type phase, once business pages are launched and the user base matures I think it could be one to watch, some analysts are saying the +1 button is already wider used than “tweet this”.
Read MoreIntroducing: BomoTechBlog.co.uk
The SocialTech blog has always included posts about web related events going on locally. As many of you will know, I’m passionate about creating a tech/web community in this area and I think the time is right for a blog that showcases all this stuff in one place and that was independent of agencies or specific groups.
BomoTechBlog will include all the Tech / Web / Creative events I can find out about in a handy calender, posts about cool agency projects, start-ups, awards and anything else tech / web / creative.
It’s a pet project and I’m not hoping to be the next TechCrunch/Mashable/TNW. I might include some affiliate linked ads for products I love (Capsule / Freeagent for starters) to hopefully cover the hosting, ready for when it starts getting millions of hits per month! (yeah, whatever…)
What would I like from you?
YOUR NEWS!
If your agency does something cool (not just a new site, but a new way of doing something), wins an award…. raises a squillion pounds for charity… please email it to the newsdesk!
If you’d like to help me write articles, I’d love to hear from you too.
Read MoreTweet n Delete twitter spam: twitzend.info
Beware the “tweet n delete” twitter spam twitzend.info
Twitter spam is nothing new, nor are rogue apps that promise followers and tweet on your behalf… but recently I’ve spotted an odd new trend, what I’m calling the “tweet n delete” twitter spam.

I spotted similar looking spam messages on a couple of accounts recently, when I went to view the accounts to warn the owners on the first 2, there were no messages listed, so I assumed the offending spam issue was resolved….
When I saw one from a friend of mine, I replied to him to suggest he check his authorized apps and he replied he hadn’t sent anything, I checked his feed and sure enough there was no spam… then the following day, there was another one from his account – this time I took a screenshot and checked his feed to find it was no longer listed.
<<<<< screen shot of the twitzend spam
vvvvv Screen capture of the feed for that time

He was keen not to be sending spam, so sent me his login details – as expected I found the rogue app listed (slightly in disguise) – A quick check of the link from the spam message (tinyurl translated to twitzend.info) confirmed it was the app in question and I removed it.

Forgetting the fact it’s a waste of time to fake bulk up your following numbers, beware authorizing websites to update your twitter feed.
If you do see a friends account tweeting anything odd, that’s then not listed in their stream when they/you check later, suggest they go to twitter.com, login, select settings (top right) and applications tab to see what is listed and remove ones they don’t need or recognize.
Thanks to @darylhales, club manager extraordinaire, for letting me login to his account to get to the bottom of this one.
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