Author Topic: The LinkedIn Scam  (Read 5613 times)

Offline Paddy

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The LinkedIn Scam
« Reply #30 on: September 27, 2013, 04:18:36 PM »
QUOTE(Xairbusdriver @ Sep 27 2013, 11:53 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Obviously, I should have used "Quebec" instead of "Ontario." All I know of Canada is a less than day trip to the Canadian part of Glacier National Park, a few layovers at the airport hotel at Toronto (I think) and too many cold days in Winnipeg in the Winter! And all that was as much as 50 years ago! Oh, I have landed at Goose Bay a few times, also. My travels to Canada have been too few and too long ago!

In order to return, however circuitously, to the topic, perhaps I should search for some 'friends' on LinkedIn that I might visit in Canada?! wink.gif HTH, Neil. tongue.gif


Yup. Toronto is IN Ontario, which is a province of Canada. (think of provinces the same way you think of states). And we're next door to Quebec. And we do have quite a few French speakers in parts of Northern Ontario, but I would say that the majority are English-speaking, though depending on where you are in Toronto, that might not be quite correct either, these days. We have a huge east Asian and Asian population in the GTA (greater Toronto area) now - makes for great restaurant choices! I think Toronto is now supposed to be either one of or the most multicultural cities in the world; certainly it's a very different and much more interesting place than it was 50 years ago.

BTW - French is the other official language in all of Canada, not that this means that every Canadian (or even most Canadians) speak it well. Everything you buy has both French and English labeling, you can get government services in both languages, and many companies also offer services in both languages. I read it better than I speak it (which isn't very well at all, as I've not had any real occasion to even practice it for over 30 years!) I'm great at reading cereal boxes! wink.gif Of course, in Quebec, the language laws are a bit different - all signage must be in French, all new immigrants, unless they are native English-speakers must send their kids to French-speaking schools etc. Anyway, our kids here in Ontario take French from Grade 4 on, and there are quite a few in French Immersion programs that start in kindergarten, which is certainly a more effective way of learning the language than the 30 minutes a day they get otherwise.
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Offline krissel

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The LinkedIn Scam
« Reply #31 on: September 28, 2013, 02:53:22 AM »
Just to test Linkedin, a few years ago I joined using a fake name and putting a Yahoo mail addy as my contact. I never added any personal info to my profile, in fact never added any info at all.

When I go to my fake profile now, up pops a dozen or so people who "I may know".  One of these is my niece who is a member of Linkedin. Two are guys I communicated with several years ago when I had a personal profile on Yahoo. Another is a former student of mine who has emailed me occasionally at my Yahoo address. What really freaks me out is a contact with my real name but the attendant profile is empty. I don't know if it is supposed to be me or just someone else with my name (there is at least one other I know of).  In short, the only way these names would come up is the cross reference of my Yahoo email with theirs, which Linkedin had to do. That alone makes my skin crawl.

no2.gif
« Last Edit: September 28, 2013, 02:54:03 AM by krissel »


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Offline Jack W

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The LinkedIn Scam
« Reply #32 on: September 28, 2013, 06:41:38 AM »
QUOTE(krissel @ Sep 28 2013, 03:53 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Just to test Linkedin, a few years ago I joined using a fake name and putting a Yahoo mail addy as my contact. I never added any personal info to my profile, in fact never added any info at all.

When I go to my fake profile now, up pops a dozen or so people who "I may know".  One of these is my niece who is a member of Linkedin. Two are guys I communicated with several years ago when I had a personal profile on Yahoo. Another is a former student of mine who has emailed me occasionally at my Yahoo address. What really freaks me out is a contact with my real name but the attendant profile is empty. I don't know if it is supposed to be me or just someone else with my name (there is at least one other I know of).  In short, the only way these names would come up is the cross reference of my Yahoo email with theirs, which Linkedin had to do. That alone makes my skin crawl.

no2.gif
It makes you wonder if Yahoo Mail is safe to use, kind of like Gmail.

They're all in the biz of making money, and not necessarily to do you a favor and protect your security.

Just my opinion.

Jack
« Last Edit: September 28, 2013, 10:33:19 AM by Highmac »
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Online Xairbusdriver

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The LinkedIn Scam
« Reply #33 on: September 28, 2013, 02:58:58 PM »
I usually come across as highly cynical when I say it, but I truly believe that any benefit we may get from these kinds of sites is purely coincidental. I'm sure some people get quite a bit of value from them, many get some value, others mostly get SPAM. But I agree, Jack, these are not "non-profit" organizations. They all want and need to make money, else all employees lose a job. But it takes some effort to design a site that can get people to "feel" that they are getting value from it. Many companies do a better job of that than others. And if a company gets caught doing things that they don't make it easy to know about (massive TOS pages don't really count)... through using your data, they stand a good chance of being run out of town on a rail, if not worse.

The above explains why I say that you and I are their product, not their [/b]customer[/b]. wink.gif
« Last Edit: September 28, 2013, 03:00:48 PM by Xairbusdriver »
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