Nick
In Remembrance
Thanks to some unscrupulous opportunists, the back and forth between the king of social networks, Facebook, and the pretender to the throne, Google+, continues. The search giant's latest foray into social networking is currently in a closed "field trial," and invitations are such a hot commodity that they are even being sold on eBay. Beware of Google+ invites appearing on Facebook, however.
A prank making the rounds on Facebook uses a technique similar to "like-jacking," in which tricksters use a disguised link or button to get you to "Like" their page, after which unwanted updates will appear on your newsfeed. In this case, scammers promise a Google+ invite if you click the "Like" button on their Facebook Page. Clicking, however, only adds you to the spammer's list, and sends unwanted marketing posts to your Facebook timeline.
One such page, titled "Get Google Plus Invitation FREE" tells would-be Google+ invitees, "If you need GooglePlus invitations... Please leave your email... Thanks." A surprising number of unsuspecting people have actually put their email addresses up on the public page for anyone—including spammers and identity thieves—to see. PCMag.com strongly recommends against publicly posting your email address; not surprisingly, I posted on the Facebook page using a test email account and did not receive any Google+ invites.
Users should "remain diligent about the sites that you visit, the links that you click, and the pages that you 'Like' on social media sites," according to Sam Masiello, chief security officer at email marketing firm ReturnPath. "You're typically allowing access to more of your sensitive information about yourself than you are aware." He also notes that this can result in "deeper access to data such as credit card information and more which could easily lead to identity theft."
In all, a Facebook search for "Google Plus" (the math addition symbol is not recognized) turned up 31 such pages. Each used some form of the Google logo, for an authentic look, to differing degrees of sophistication. Invitations are not only appearing on Facebook; beware of those that also show up in your email inbox.
For more, see PCMag's full hands-on with Google+, the slideshow below, as well as 6 Things Google+ Can Do That Facebook Can't and Social Networking Showdown: 8 Facebook Features Google+ Doesn't Have (Yet). On privacy, see Google+ Privacy: Has Google Learned Its Lesson?
A prank making the rounds on Facebook uses a technique similar to "like-jacking," in which tricksters use a disguised link or button to get you to "Like" their page, after which unwanted updates will appear on your newsfeed. In this case, scammers promise a Google+ invite if you click the "Like" button on their Facebook Page. Clicking, however, only adds you to the spammer's list, and sends unwanted marketing posts to your Facebook timeline.
One such page, titled "Get Google Plus Invitation FREE" tells would-be Google+ invitees, "If you need GooglePlus invitations... Please leave your email... Thanks." A surprising number of unsuspecting people have actually put their email addresses up on the public page for anyone—including spammers and identity thieves—to see. PCMag.com strongly recommends against publicly posting your email address; not surprisingly, I posted on the Facebook page using a test email account and did not receive any Google+ invites.
Users should "remain diligent about the sites that you visit, the links that you click, and the pages that you 'Like' on social media sites," according to Sam Masiello, chief security officer at email marketing firm ReturnPath. "You're typically allowing access to more of your sensitive information about yourself than you are aware." He also notes that this can result in "deeper access to data such as credit card information and more which could easily lead to identity theft."
In all, a Facebook search for "Google Plus" (the math addition symbol is not recognized) turned up 31 such pages. Each used some form of the Google logo, for an authentic look, to differing degrees of sophistication. Invitations are not only appearing on Facebook; beware of those that also show up in your email inbox.
For more, see PCMag's full hands-on with Google+, the slideshow below, as well as 6 Things Google+ Can Do That Facebook Can't and Social Networking Showdown: 8 Facebook Features Google+ Doesn't Have (Yet). On privacy, see Google+ Privacy: Has Google Learned Its Lesson?