Finding business contacts and passwords on the Internet

by billso on Saturday, 12 April 2008

On 31 March 2008, Hawai­ian Telcom’s Cliff Miyake pub­lished an arti­cle in the Hon­olulu Star-Bulletin on how to find busi­ness con­tacts in Google. It’s not that hard to do, espe­cially with the grow­ing accep­tance of social net­work­ing by professionals.

LinkedIn is another good way to track down con­tacts. The free ser­vice is lim­ited, but most users find that it’s enough to get the job done. I like LinkedIn because its user inter­face is much cleaner that other social net­work­ing sites. No music or video play­ers, no flashy graph­ics — LinkedIn seems like a bet­ter way to make a good impres­sion on professionals.

Have you revealed too much?

As I’ve men­tioned before, some peo­ple and com­pa­nies need to address secu­rity con­cerns. Many social net­work­ing sites want users to reveal their lives in detail, to cre­ate com­pelling pro­files and addi­tional links among users.

But what if a user inad­ver­tently reveals their pass­word on their pro­file? it can hap­pen. I’ve met peo­ple who use their children’s names and birth­days as pass­words. Place of birth is a com­mon secu­rity ques­tion that banks and finan­cial ser­vices com­pa­nies ask as part of a mul­ti­ple authen­ti­ca­tion scheme. Social net­works also ask for that infor­ma­tion — as part of user profiles.

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