Companies That Clean Up Bad Online Reputations 180
Radon360 writes "As the ever-increasing amount of information available online becomes indexed and searchable, more and more people find themselves potentially at risk of having unwanted personal information revealed or their names incorrectly associated with inflammatory topics. The are several firms that now sell their services of trying to remove or bury such information that their client deems offensive or troublesome. Companies, such as ReputationDefender and DefendMyName will, for a fee, do the legwork to find content that negatively impacts your reputation and have it removed or buried deeper in search rankings. However, some of these efforts can backfire, as the act to get it taken down can sometimes draw more attention than the offending content in the first place."
Suspicion (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Suspicion (Score:5, Interesting)
The sad thing about our lovely new commercialised net is that as long as it could be valuable to keep, it will be kept (drive space is cheap).
Add to this the various governmental ideas that as long as it could potentially at some time be construed as possibly being scary or linked to terrorist activity, ISPs should be forced to keep it... Well. I had my reasons to screw up, I'm sure plenty of the current generation have got their good reasons to screw up, but they likely won't be getting away from it as easily as I did.
Re:Suspicion (Score:4, Interesting)
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I would tend to suggest that you simply point employers at it.
If I was a hiring manager (I am not, and hope to never be one), I would likely offer you a job right now (after reading your resume), if you were willing to relocate. Your writing is quite good.
-nB
Re:Suspicion (Score:4, Funny)
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If I were to apply for a new job I'd definitely do everything in my power to make sure they knew I was not a crimi
on the other hand (Score:2)
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Potential Employer: We have found some troubling things on the Internet attribitued to you Mr./Ms. (insert very common name)
You: Um, that's not me.
Potential Empoyer: We would like to believe you, but your name is all over it.
You: Do you have any idea how common my name is? Just Google it! You'll find people with the same name as me all over the internet!
Potential Employer: Hmm.. Good point. Ok,
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The problem is the conversation you described is a very, very, very rare thing.
A much more likely scenario is:
Potential Employer: Thank you for meeting with us. We'll let you know.
You: Thank you. I look forward to working together.
Potential Employer: ...
You: Hello? We met for an interview recently. Have you made a decision?
Potential Employer: ...
You: wtf?
If the employer really wants you and has no other comparable candidates, it may come up just as a CYA so employer can say, "he said it wasn't
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I first became aware of him when I was in high-school -- his drawing of a ninja turtle was published in the children's section of the newspaper, with my name under it. I got teased. Then a short while later I endured some more razzing when he called the local radio station (and got on air) to request a song that I hated.
I've
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Tell me about it. When I was in high school, I made a web page on tripod that has horrible loud backgrounds and graphics and talks for far too long about my then-boyfriend. All around, very embarrassing. I haven't touched it in nine years, since my freshman year of college, and it's STILL THERE! I've long since forgotten the password, the email account it's linked to is long gone, and per my email exchanges with tripod tech support I seem to have reg
Re:Suspicion (Score:5, Interesting)
Then there's the recent uproar about a certain number being deleted from Digg...
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Disturbing (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Disturbing (Score:4, Insightful)
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Mod parent up.
Indeed, it's unlikely that they (a politician) would give a third party the trust necessary to cover up something that would be important enough to have them contact the cover-up company in the first place.
Usenet (Score:3, Interesting)
Even then it was only possible because I have an unusual name, and I had an unusually early presence on the internet.
N
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The first Politician to run a campaign that shows me everything they've ever done, including fucking that retarded girl in the butt after getting her to pretend she's a pony, will be the first Politician to get my vote.
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Clinton, Bush, and Obama h
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Or we could just become a bit more tolerant instead.
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*holds breath*
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Dude, you're turning a sort of blue colour... Dude?
What would help a lot is if people got a little less (well, a lot less) litigious over every teeny tiny thing that happens and stop being such a bunch of victime. Sometimes stuff happens or people say stuff. Just roll with it.
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it's true (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:it's true (Score:5, Funny)
They're freaky & they're fruity, mysteriously into dookie, they're all together spooning, The Goatsee Family.
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Oh that made my day!
ReputationDefender and DefendMyName Suck! (Score:3, Funny)
(Let's see them defend themselves against THAT!)
Logic (Score:3)
Now, we're so lucky that we have intelligent and abstract thinking personnel managers (newspeak: Human Resource Managers) who will be able to look over such inconveniences as the tracks we leave behind and focus on personality and ability, mixed with some cultural heritage, ignoring the ambiguity of the net altogether. Or, maybe this takes another 50 years to sink in for the working area you might work in (given a lack of such 'Human Resource Managers' at a place near you).
We forever will be a masked society (Score:2)
In my case... (Score:2)
This can extend beyond personal reputations.. (Score:2)
Information is information, and it don't care what sequence of symbols are attached... seek, find and bury or bring forward.
wayback machine (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder if these goons also create a robots.txt file on the server that they are trying to clean up? It would be hard to remove content from the wayback machine that you do not own.
Re:wayback machine (Score:5, Interesting)
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Employees/Employers (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder if in the future we'll ever see legislation against discrimination by internet search? Not for a while at least, I posit --- there are probably more deserving unlegislated discriminations to target first.
Facebook and MySpace too (Score:2)
I've heard stories about employers using Facebook searches. They would get summer associates/recent grads to look up applicants. These stories are anecdotal, but only one degree of seperation, so I believe them (although two for you, so...)
And on /. I heard about a teacher who lost their job because of their MySpace page. Granted, it was a little more detailed than that, as apparently she was directing students to her page, and it had drinking. But in those cases it is idiots posting pictures of themse
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Because heaven forfend that school pupils find out their teacher *drinks*! Won't someone think of the children?!!
In any case, in the photo in question there was no indication of any kind as to what the teacher was drinking. How on earth this could result in her losing her job I don't know. I suppose it's the sort of thing that can only happen in ultra-conservative fundamentalist theocracies where people are denied basic civil liberties.
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My point was it was only that she inadvertantly did it to herself. If its that easy to get an overreaction, justified or not, by mistake, imagine how much easier it would have been for someone with malice to do it to you.
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"... I can see how an applicant would consider the use of these services, perhaps for some specific reason, or just to clean their google-reputation generally
Yeah, a sort of reputation laundering
This seems like a great idea. I need this bad. (Score:5, Funny)
-- George W. Bush
That explains it (Score:2)
been there done that (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, it's not hidden, and if someone came upon it, it would be useless to deny, but he thought it valuable to at least not haev it come up first in the rankings
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The Streisand Effect (Score:5, Informative)
This is known as the Streisand Effect [wikipedia.org], the scourge of all Internet censors.
Interestingly, I note that this Wikipedia article is now being considered for deletion. Wouldn't it be ironic if it got deleted and then popped up somewhere else?
The Streisand Effect in action (Score:2)
Interestingly, I note that this Wikipedia article is now being considered for deletion."
Why?
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internet archive anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Their motto (Score:2)
and
DefendMyName - "We created the idea for Rockstar's Bully"
Interesting ... (Score:3, Informative)
Just today, I was reading an article in ComputerWorld (Canadian edition) about companies that mine the internet for a brand or company, and report flagged items to that company.
Several companies are selling this as a service or as software.
One company is Milton based RepuTrace, another is in Seattle.
They cite a case where workers said they were drunk or high when working, another case of threats against the company,
Here is the full article [itworldcanada.com].
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What boggles my mind the most after reading the article is that they seem to be selling a service that Google offers for free. You can go to Google News [google.com] and setup custom alerts that email you whenever your company's name appears in a news or blog article anywhere on the interweb... Sounds like the exact same service this company is selling, although they offer you either email alerts
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Hahahaha... If you believe that crap I've got a bridge I want to sell you. Whenever I hear a consulting firm trot out those words "this is our 'core competence'" I put on my knee high boots because the shit is goi
hehe.... "backfires"... (Score:3, Funny)
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=christina+pa
Looks like it sure worked!
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You have missed the point - she complained about noise from bars, and got unfairly slurred as anti-gay - so its a great outcome for her that her story gets elevated to the top.
Nice Try (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's just see them wipe the internets of Dave Chappelle...
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Google-wise, I have a similar situation. There are two other people in this field with my name - one is a former VP at Sun and the other is another software developer.
Since I come first in Google, I get mail for them on occasion (I'm sure the fact that I have jameshollingshead.com doesn't help). The last time I got mail for the former Sun VP James, I gave the lady the right contact information and asked her to say hello for me (again).
I would imagine it has to be fun for the HR people
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But it does have a couple of advantages. People remember my name. And I get lost in the Google chaff.
True: I used to live on Marilyn Drive, which could be fun when ordering pizza.
So Ob I can't beleive it's not here yet (Score:4, Funny)
My true name is, honestly... Dave Chappelle.
Could be worse. Your name could be Michael Bolton.
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Same Service, Secretly (Score:2)
He's also the pastor at your local church part time, don't be shy when that collection plate comes around...
Not really meant for individuals (Score:2)
Companies already do stuff like this. When they get a bad reputation, instead of getting at the root of the problem that got them in trouble, they call in the lawyers and the marketing people, or hire a new PR firm. Well, these guys sell a specialty service within tha
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There are probably other companies out there offering similar services for corporate clients, but ReputationDefender has always been about helping regular people monitor what's being said about them online, tracking down personal information about private citizens
Google Approved? (Score:4, Insightful)
Since when do Internet websites have to obey rules from anyone, especially a search engine?
If I ran a web-reputation repair company, I would do everything I could to determine what was "against" the rules in Google's mind and do it on every website where one or more of my clients had trouble. Consequently, those sites would be flagged "rule breakers" and immediately drop very low in Google's search ratings.
My job here is done!
I've got a better idea... (Score:2)
They could call it FuckEmInTheAss, DestroyTheOpp or getthefacts.com
Repuation Defender - how it works (Score:2)
From TFA, ReputationDefender works like this:
1. Send a polite letter to a site you're looking to expunge info from, telling them who the company is and what they do, and what their specific requests is.
2. Get less polite, including "contacting a site's Internet service provider to complain about the site".
3. When there is no response, ReputationDefender will "sometimes suggests that clients hire a lawyer. Emphasis mine to ensure I'm conveying the sheer drama of such a bold move.
4. No ??? - go direct
Re:Repuation Defender - how it works (Score:5, Informative)
First of all, there is a technical problem of person-oriented search. This is a large part of finding content, both undesirable and otherwise, that refers to a particular person, and it is a rather complicated technical problem. It involves grouping together search engine results, and resolving a general co-reference problem across disparate types of content - how do you know that "John Smith" in one web page refers to "John Smith" in another web page? A combination of automation and human input is currently required, but this is an active area that ReputationDefender is involved in R&D for. This is more than just "Googling for your own name", as some have suggested in the past.
If you want to Google for your own name, by all means, go ahead, it's free, though often a good starting point. But that's different from the MyReputation service, which involves aggregating from a large number of sources (meta-search), prioritizing, clustering, annotating, and pushing intermittent updates on search results to clients. This may not be useful to everyone, but it is definitely quite useful to some people. We've heard many people say "Oh wow, I didn't know that was out there".
Secondly, removal efforts, which you describe, are one service that ReputationDefender offers. Even that service is substantially more nuanced than you make it sound - there is a database of techniques and practices that the services group has developed, and clients often do find this service to be valuable to them. Just because something isn't rocket science doesn't mean it's not useful to many people. Additionally, the fees for content removal efforts are by no means exorbitant.
There are other services offered by ReputationDefender as well, including higher priced offerings, that work quite differently and rely on making content less easily discoverable using SEO-related techniques, rather than actually seeking its removal. Again, those might not pique your interest, but there are quite a few satisfied customers who do think they are rather valuable.
As for the involvement of lawyers, it has only occurred in a very few cases. In cases with a strong legal mandate, ReputationDefender has in some cases been able to get law firms interested in representing clients who otherwise might not have been able to afford legal representation, and certainly not of the caliber than has become involved. Clients have been happy when they previously felt powerless about awful things being said about them, and suddenly found that their case was interesting enough to a group of high powered lawyers to take it on.
None of these things might seem valuable to you if you haven't been in a situation to need them before, or if you are so technically savvy as to need no help in any of these areas, but there are quite a few people who do find them useful.
By way of disclaimer, I am a consultant to ReputationDefender and a shareholder in the company, so I am surely biased on these matters, but I am open minded to legitimate critiques. But your description of what the company does is radically oversimplified.
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Translation:
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The definition of "won" for clients is that they got rid of unwanted, misleading, unfair content out there about them, and we have many clients for whom we have successfully removed or neutralized content. We see it as a substantial pos
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Well, fair comment. I find your post much more informative than TFA. I suppose I knew there was more to it even as I read the article, but the article really did undersell the process, and as such I couldn't help but make a smartass comment. I think it was the presentation of the 'sometimes suggesting the hiring of a lawyer' - it just seem glib.
Your point is fair and understood.
AutoAdmit (Score:3, Interesting)
The girl hired Reputation Defender, and it became an even larger clusterfuck; might I call it a mung universe?
Basically, I don't have anything meaningful to say other than Reputation Defender has the ability to turn a huge clusterfuck of pricks into an even bigger universe full of mung [urbandictionary.com]. Warning: the definitions are nastier than you could possibly imagine!
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There are times I wish I weren't so damned curious. This is one of them.
-Mike
Backfire is so sweet! (Score:4, Informative)
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This is actually a bit disturbing. I'm not lawyer, but as far as I can tell ICANN rules generally state that if somebody owns your name as a domain name, and uses it to post defamatory information about you, you can have the domain name turned over to you -- similar to the way trademark holders get domain names handed over to them. The problem? It costs $1500 to file a claim with the WIPO, a pittance for a business, but crippling for an individual. And forget
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Hardly New (Score:2)
However, what I found interesting was that they had for some time used a company in the US who use hoards of bored housewives to Google/MSN/whatever all day for company keywords looking
Oblig (Score:2)
The are several firms that now sell their services
Are there companies that clean up bad online grammer?
Mea Culpa (Score:2)
grammer
I guess that's what the Preview button is for.
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SERMA (Search Engine Repuatation Management) (Score:2)
Dell is notorious for this - they did it extensively with the "exploding battery" issue.
An easier way... (Score:2)
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Says who?
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And, sadly, it's the way that Google helps individuals counter correct, if unpleasant, information.
Just another place to apply spin, I'm afraid.
Lame names (Score:2)
In Soviet Russia .... (Score:2)
(Crap! Now I've got to pay to get all those stupid Obligatory posts taken down.)
Different Logins (Score:2)
Business Plan (Score:2)
2) Wait a few years while users post more and more bizzare comments.
3) Start another business that will clean up content when users start having regrets.
4) ????
5) Profit!
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Re:This has been happening for years... (Score:4, Informative)
No, fanboys tend to be a spontaneous thing. Microsoft's astroturf is much more calculated, and has involved a company called DCI [sourcewatch.org].
DCI have funded groups like Americans for Technology Leadership (ATL), and the Association for Competitive Technology to shill for MS in the past.
The current astroturf campaigns here and in other blogs is likely to be coordinated by DCI or a similar PR firm.
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