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Articles tagged 'LBS'

Industry News, Social Media

Foursquare’s New Privacy Updates Aren’t Really… Private


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foursquare logo

I’m a fan of appropriate use of Foursquare. That means not connecting with people whom you wouldn’t be at least a little excited to entertain at your house at some point in time. Back when LBS’s started becoming the latest thing (within the last couple of years), lots of people expressed concerns over privacy issues with checking in at home or potentially opening themselves up to cyberstalking.

Argument aside that 1) these are opt-in services and no one is being forced to download them, register, and check in everywhere, and 2) you shouldn’t connect with people whom you don’t know thus allowing them to track your every move in the first place, I can see some of the issues with privacy, particularly when it comes to those who are confident enough in their connections to check in at home, at their kids’ schools, and so forth.

Earlier this week, Foursquare made some positive changes to its platform by adding a layer of privacy to home check-ins. According to its support forum:

Many users like to check in to their homes on foursquare!

To make sure your home venue is private to you and your friends, choose Home as the venue’s primary category. Doing this will ensure that only you and your friends can see the address on the venue page; everyone else sees a zoomed out map with no map pin (rather than the real location). If a Mayorship, badge unlock, or check-in is shared to Twitter or Facebook, the venue URL will include a map without a specific location for everyone.

Once you’ve created your home as a venue and categorized it as Home, you’ll also have the option to edit or delete it by going to its venue page at foursquare.com and clicking “Edit Venue.”

The actual privacy of this, however, is questionable — as I discovered when I experimented with my own first home check-in.

Technology & Resources

How To Source Using Digital Anthropology


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digital anthropology

The study of human anthropology is observing humankind and the social relationships of human beings. Naturally, with the onset of digital social networks, there is a new way to study human behavioral patterns: digital anthropology. After all, online social networks are our evolutionary reaction to the digital age, and mimic real-life intercultural proclivities. Anthropology consists of studying people’s online social relationships, habits, and patterns. Because online life reflects real life there is much to be learned by observing the activities and ‘bread crumb trails’ left by individuals via their social networking interactions.

Of course, with these new ways to observe people’s everyday lives, we as sourcers are also provided with new tools with which to study our prospects, develop profiles, and conduct outreach to potential candidates. Two such tools that have proven to be extremely useful for sourcing include event sites and location-based services.

Industry News, Social Media

Facebook Launches ‘Places’


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We wrote an article yesterday on location-based services, and a new one has just been added to the mix: Facebook yesterday announced the launch of its long-awaited Facebook Places LBS at a press conference. They have outlined how to use this new feature in a blog post that went up yesterday as well. With Places, you can tap a “Check In” button to share your physical location with your Facebook friends. Your check-in will then appear on that location’s “place page,” on your profile, and in your friends’ News Feeds. Your friends can also tag you as being with them, after which you can remove that tag–similar to the way Facebook’s photo-tagging feature operates.

Using this new feature requires using a version of Facebook’s iPhone application or logging into its touch.facebook.com smartphone site on a phone that supports GPS auto-location. On the site, you should see a “Places” tab on its home page. The feature will be rolled out over the course of the day by regions. (as of the posting of this article, it doesn’t appear to be working yet in the Pacific NW)

Some are calling this new service a ‘Foursquare-killer‘, even though Facebook has partnered with popular existing LBS services including Foursquare and Gowalla. Places doesn’t appear to award badges for that extra competition of trying to become the ‘mayor’ of a particular location.

The advantage of Places from a recruitment standpoint is that people who were stepping gingerly into the world of social media by joining Facebook have just been thrown into the world of LBS by the Facebook developers. People will able to easily check into venues like, say, their places of employment, and as a result they will be leaving ‘breadcrumb’ clues of their interests and hobbies as they go through their days and check in at various places. This has been an interesting method of data gathering and profile development to me ever since LBSes hit the scene. As Leena Rao of  TechCrunch shares,

“With these sorts of incentives and a potentially hot new feature that will be put in front of hundreds of millions of Facebook members, what advertiser and business wouldn’t want to create a Places page? Many businesses have already been flocking to Facebook as both and advertising and marketing platform, and now they can have their address, map, phone number, PLUS all the public social activity that is going on at a location. A merged Places page will include a considerable amount of information, including the number of check-ins, who checked-in to a place, number of Likes, the Places’ Wall, and more.”

A cautionary tale to those who will try this out: be conscious of your check-ins. You are responsible for your own actions. I wrote an article a couple months ago about the outcry of privacy issues with regards to LBS – but those issues lay mainly in our own hands. Be selective of who you connect with, and take full advantage of the privacy settings that Facebook allows.

What do you think of the new Facebook Places feature? Do you feel it will prove to be helpful with sourcing candidates? Share your thoughts below in the comments.

Social Media, Technology & Resources

Location, Location, Location!


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zubed21

LBS (Location-Based Services) are the new ‘black’ when it comes to shiny new sourcing tools. Everyone (including me!) talks about how we can (and should) be using services like FourSquare, Gowalla, Loopt, Yelp, and Britekite to enhance our mobile recruiting activities. Some have even talked about using these types of services for putting pins on locations where companies have job openings. In fact, many folks in our industry have written about the significance of this:

Let’s take a look at a location-based resource that was designed specifically for recruiting: ZubedJobs, a product of Zubed.com.