I work at Beevolve. One of the lessons this incident has showed us is safeguarding privacy in an increasingly open world has its own disadvantages. This kind of troll attacks will only increase as stakes get higher.
Managing your online reputation? This is actually a blog post promoting Beevolve's monitoring services, and reveals that the company apparently failed to do the obvious: Contacting him directly to ask why he tweeted the comment in question.
One of Beevolve's well-wishers (@mikerbrt) has already approached the troll to see if he wants to reveal his real identity. He is yet to get any answer.
How is this promoting their own product? I think its a genuinely effort to put forth a real life story before you. Most of the SM gurus would say that feeding these trolls is usually a waste of time; instead, monitor quietly to gauge the response to the comment. For a bigger brand, it might not hurt at all, but for a startup, the impact would be much higher. The approach taken by Beevolve as a whole is certainly a better way to tackle this issue. If otherwise, I am hoping someone here might be able to at least point me in the right direction.
Corporate reputation is one thing, private reputations are far more fragile I think and the trolls have lots of tools at their disposal to make your life hell.
I'm currently hip-deep in tracking a guy that has been harassing some of the users of my website in ways that defy they imagination (and I thought I'd seen it all), and with every layer of dirt that gets peeled back more is revealed.
Really, if someone has it it in for you online they have a pretty easy time and you'll have a very hard time trying to get rid of things that damage you. This is in large part due to the unwillingness of the larger players to keep their userbase in check, and if the language in which the harassment takes place is not English then you're facing an even bigger uphill battle.
Managing your online reputation should be easier than it is today, the damage is very real and it is with the current tools for a non-technical person next to impossible to put a stop to it.
I can see why beevolve targets businesses but there definitely is a lot of work to be done for private individuals as well.
> I'm currently hip-deep in tracking a guy that has been harassing some of the users of my website in ways that defy they imagination (and I thought I'd seen it all), and with every layer of dirt that gets peeled back more is revealed.
Care to explain further? You'll help many more people by disclosing what happened (and leaving out personal details).
Please do not limit yourself to a comment and write an article if needed.
I'm working together with law enforcement on this one and I don't think it would help one bit if I gave out any information at this point but I will do a very detailed write-up when it is all over, you can count on it.
Why is this being upvoted? The entire article boils down to "People say nasty things about your business online. Products like ours help you find when they do that"
There's a story to illustrate this, but then -- and this is the kicker -- we never find out who the guy is or what his beef was. If we had, it would have been an acceptable story. But as it is, I can't see what people will get of value from spending their time reading it
(Aside from the commercial value the writers got, of course, and I don't begrudge them that. Just trying to help them with providing a better trade for the reader next time)
This article promised to be a great detective story, with lots of twists and perhaps with a surprise ending. But it wasn't that. That makes it frustrating.
We do have some clues on who he represents but realized that finger-pointing is not going to help. I hope whoever was behind this got the message and stops messing from now onwards.
I'm not saying you have to call out folks or be mean to them. I'm saying that if you write a story it should have a plot. A point. Some dramatic tension. A Thesis. Something. This story did not seem to have that.
I'm sure it will work wonders for your purpose -- which I take it to be making sure he got the message -- but as a reader I'm really not very interested in your purpose. Sorry. If it makes you feel any better, people don't give a hoot about the purpose of my stories either -- except as a way to entertain them.
Like I said, the critique was meant in the spirit of friendship. From the large number of votes, it appears some people found real value in your story, but I'm just at a loss to see what it was. That's all.
These aren't "attacks", they're just the exercise of free speech on the internet. No matter what, some people are always going to say bad stuff about you and if you take an adult attitude towards these things then you just have to live with criticism - even if it seems unfair or unpleasant to you.
But what if this 'unfair' criticisms turn away your potential customers from you. If you are running a big company, it probably doesn't affect you that much. But for startups, there is much to lose by losing even a few customers to these 'unfair' criticisms.
13 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 47.1 ms ] threadI'm currently hip-deep in tracking a guy that has been harassing some of the users of my website in ways that defy they imagination (and I thought I'd seen it all), and with every layer of dirt that gets peeled back more is revealed.
Really, if someone has it it in for you online they have a pretty easy time and you'll have a very hard time trying to get rid of things that damage you. This is in large part due to the unwillingness of the larger players to keep their userbase in check, and if the language in which the harassment takes place is not English then you're facing an even bigger uphill battle.
Managing your online reputation should be easier than it is today, the damage is very real and it is with the current tools for a non-technical person next to impossible to put a stop to it.
I can see why beevolve targets businesses but there definitely is a lot of work to be done for private individuals as well.
Care to explain further? You'll help many more people by disclosing what happened (and leaving out personal details).
Please do not limit yourself to a comment and write an article if needed.
There's a story to illustrate this, but then -- and this is the kicker -- we never find out who the guy is or what his beef was. If we had, it would have been an acceptable story. But as it is, I can't see what people will get of value from spending their time reading it (Aside from the commercial value the writers got, of course, and I don't begrudge them that. Just trying to help them with providing a better trade for the reader next time)
This article promised to be a great detective story, with lots of twists and perhaps with a surprise ending. But it wasn't that. That makes it frustrating.
I'm not saying you have to call out folks or be mean to them. I'm saying that if you write a story it should have a plot. A point. Some dramatic tension. A Thesis. Something. This story did not seem to have that.
I'm sure it will work wonders for your purpose -- which I take it to be making sure he got the message -- but as a reader I'm really not very interested in your purpose. Sorry. If it makes you feel any better, people don't give a hoot about the purpose of my stories either -- except as a way to entertain them.
Like I said, the critique was meant in the spirit of friendship. From the large number of votes, it appears some people found real value in your story, but I'm just at a loss to see what it was. That's all.