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Fugitive Arrested After Moronic Facebook Friend Request

Remember the story about the New Zealand authorities who located a fugitive couple, thanks to the misguided Facebook status of their relative? While that mistake was out of the criminals' hands, Maxi Sopo made his own bed with the social networking site.

In 2003, Sopo went from selling roses in Seattle nightclubs to committing bank fraud, making him about $200,000 richer. A natural career move, right? According to Huffington Post, he soon fled in a rental car to Mexico where he lived a playboy lifestyle. He'd sun on the beaches of Cancun till dark and throw down in the nightclubs till dawn.

But just living this MTV spring-break life wasn't enough for Sopo. So, he started bragging about it on Facebook, too. The AP quotes one Facebook as reading, "LIFE IS VERY SIMPLE REALLY!!!!BUT SOME OF US HUMANS MAKE A MESS OF IT...REMEMBER AM JUST HERE TO HAVE FUN PARTEEEEEEE."

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Web, Social Networking

Facebook Poking Lands Lady in Jail

Woman Arrested For
Facebook has added a couple of verbs to our collective vocabulary. There's the common "Facebook," which means to message someone or request them as a friend, despite sounding more like something you'd say to somebody before punching them (e.g. "I'll Facebook you!"). And then there's to "poke" -- a gentle way of prodding acquaintances or initiating contact with someone you don't know, despite sounding like a form of sexual assault.

Since that latter function's inception, we've been waiting for someone to get in trouble for poking people on Facebook -- and not just because we're juvenile and enjoy the double entendre. Finally we got our wish. The Tennessean is reporting that a Hendersonville, Tennessee woman, Shannon D. Jackson, was arrested for "poking" an unidentified woman and, in doing so, violating a court order that prohibits Jackson from "telephoning, contacting or otherwise communicating with the petitioner."

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Web, Social Networking

Flight Attendant Hits on Teen Girl via Facebook


Perhaps Australian airline Jetstar should look across the Pacific a little more often. If it were to have done so, it would have noticed stateside corporations' prevalent bans of social networking sites, and potentially saved themselves from some considerable embarrassment.

According to News.com.au, a woman identified only as Elizabeth has complained to the airline of a male flight attendant who, she claims, harassed her 15-year-old daughter after spotting her on a flight. According to Elizabeth, neither she nor her two daughters gave their names to the man during the flight last month. Regardless, the 15 year old got home, checked her Facebook, and found a friend request from the guy. After she denied the request, he continued to pester the girl with messages, her mother says.

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Web, Social Networking

Cops Disciplined for Posting Effigy Video to Facebook

We give up. Seriously.

No matter how many cautionary tales we share, every week someone ends up dumped, fired, arrested, or worse. People just can't seem to learn that no matter how private you think something is, if you post it online, people will see it.

The latest victims of Facebook faux pas are members of Calumet County, Wisconsin's sheriff department. FOX 11 reports that Jennifer Bass, a sheriff's deputy, decided it was a good idea to stuff a police uniform, attach the names of fellow officers to it via Post-It notes, burn it in effigy, and then post the resulting video (some of which can be seen below) to Facebook. One of the deputies can even be heard on the video making an admittedly tasteless (but not racist, as has been implied) joke about the effigy's resemblance to a KKK rally. Photos were also taken at the backyard burning that implicated another officer, Wendy Schmitz.

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Web, Social Networking

Alleged Bullies Sued Over Racist and Obscene Fake Facebook Profile

We're pretty sure that many victims of bullies would gladly go back to the good ol' days, when mocking and persecution didn't have the speed and reach the Internet affords. But bullies are quickly finding out that the Web doesn't provide as much protective anonymity as they may have thought.

One of the new avenues for bullying is impersonation via social networking sites. But four teens in Cook County, Illinois may have gone a little too far in alleged attacks on a high school athlete. They are now finding themselves defendants in a lawsuit that could have dire financial consequences for both them and their families. The four boys, identified only by their initials -- R.C., A.G., K.Z., and M.S. -- are being sued on five separate counts, including defamation and emotional distress, by the victim and his mother.

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Web, Social Networking

Old Mullets And Tutus Evoke Digital Nightmares


Is Facebook turning into a dusty high school yearbook?

As the social networking demographic, um, matures, increasing numbers of newly savvy users are posting photos that some, at least, would prefer to keep buried in the basement. People often scan potentially embarrassing old photos, post them, tag re-connected friends, and share a jolly good virtual laugh around a running commentary of self-mockery. Not everyone, though, always laughs.

Because some may post old photos without any input or approval from (former?) friends, people have very little control over what images of themselves resurface. So, the onetime college student with the mullet and Def Leppard t-shirt who is now a respected real estate lawyer has little control over what regrettable fossils of his past leak out onto the Web. Those fossils could, it seems, threaten his reputation.

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Computers, Web

Burglar Allegedly Checks Facebook Account While Robbing a House



Lots of people have asked: does all the time we spend on Facebook make us dumber? After reading about a 19-year-old Pennsylvania kid's allegedly bungled burglary, the answer just might be, yes. The Journal reports that Jonathan G. Parker was arraigned Tuesday on one count of felony burglary, after he allegedly stole two diamond rings from a Martinsburg, West Virginia home. The police didn't even break a sweat during the investigation. The victim noticed somebody had logged in to Parker's Facebook account on her computer and forgotten to sign out.

How hard-up would this kid have to be for his social networking fix? Considering his alleged spoils, if he'd just waited a while, Parker could've bought his own computer. (The rings are worth over $3,500.) Of course, logical thought isn't the average criminal's strong suit, as evidenced by the number of times Facebook has led to an arrest. [From: The Journal]

Web, Social Networking

Fired for Complaining on Twitter, Employee Takes to YouTube

Why is it that people can't learn to exercise a little discretion when sharing things online? How many cautionary tales does this world need? Apparently, the story of the Philadelphia Eagles employee who was fired for criticizing a team trade via Facebook didn't stick. And neither did the anecdote about the South African man who used Facebook to call his boss a "serial masturbator," or the woman who found herself in the middle of a libel suit after complaining about her apartment and landlord on Twitter.

Well, you can add Timothy "DeLaGhetto", a now former California Pizza Kitchen (CPK) employee, to that seemingly endless list. A uniform change policy had the servers' white button-up shirts and red ties replaced with black button-ups and black slacks. Timothy took to his Twitter account, @Traphik, to voice his displeasure over the change, sending an @reply to @calpizzakitchen that read, "@calpizzakitchen black button ups are the lamest shit ever!!!." Not the most professional thing ever!!!

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Web, Social Networking

Delusional Lady Insists She's Student's Mother on Facebook

Crazy Lady Insists Shes Student's Mother on Facebook

When College Humor is your source, you can't assume the material is 100-percent real. But that said, even if "Facebook Mom" is purely fictional, it's not hard to imagine that someone has experienced something similar.

According to the popular humor site, the above screen shot depicts a Facebook conversation between a Penn State student and some woman who seems to think she is his mother. The image was passed to the writer by his brother, to whom it was forwarded by a friend.

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Web, Social Networking

President Obama Warns Kids About Dumb Facebooking

Listen, children, we've warned you about posting your youthful indiscretions on Facebook and the likely ramifications. We've told you to be wary of what you post, as employers -- actual or potential -- will almost certainly scrutinize your profile, possibly firing or declining to hire you if they don't like what they see. We've given you example after example after example. So, what do you do? You post incriminating comments on Facebook and get yourselves fired. Oh, we know. Nobody wants to listen to those dumb old dweebs at Switched. Well, would you maybe listen to the President of the United States?

During President Obama's address to the nation's youth yesterday, one student asked how a youngster might become president. "Well, let me give you some very practical tips," the President answered. "First of all, I want everybody here to be careful about what you post on Facebook, because in the YouTube age, whatever you do, it will be pulled up again later somewhere in your life." Check out the video after the break (Obama's answer starts around 2:00).

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Web, Social Networking

Cop Attacks Man for Facebooking His Wife

Reading your significant other's e-mails, texts, or Facebook messages usually turns out to be a bad idea. For example, a police officer in Martinsburg, West Virginia didn't take too kindly to some 'friendly' Facebook exchanges between his wife and a mutual friend. While some would simply talk it out, this cop allegedly decided to let his fists do the talking.

According to Your4State.com, Lieutenant John Sherman, while off-duty, confronted Larry "Tike" Murphy about the messages last Thursday. After a heated exchange, Sherman allegedly punched Murphy in the face and back, and ripped his shirt (and right by the Martinsburg Church of Christ, no less). As a result, Sherman was placed on administrative leave and charged with battery. According to court documents, Sherman "did not believe it was right that another man was communicating with his wife by Internet-sending some of the things he was sending to her."

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Web, Social Networking

Cheerleader Sues Over Facebook Privacy Invasion

When it comes to Facebook, there's a simple rule of thumb that people seem to always forget: If you don't want someone to see a photo or read a comment, don't post it. Had this rule been applied more often, there'd be fewer lawsuits stemming from content posted on the social-networking giant.

According to Ars Technica, high school cheerleader Mandi Jackson has filed suit through her parents against the Pearl, Mississippi school district after she was allegedly forced to turn over her Facebook log-in information to her cheerleading coach on September 10, 2007. The lawsuit (PDF) claims she was also subjected to cruel and unusual punishment after the coach disseminated "profanity-laced" messages to the rest of the staff, after Jackson had exchanged notes with a fellow cheerleader about politics within the squad.

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Web, Social Networking

South African Calls Boss a "Serial Masturbator" on Facebook, Gets Fired

With so much pain and humiliation caused by Facebook around the world, we were less than shocked to hear that the cycle of embarrassment had traveled south of the Equator.

According to an AFP article, hosted on Google, a South African man was recently terminated from his job after calling his boss a "serial masturbator" on Facebook. What did he think was going to happen? Did he expect a cookie and a tummy rub? Apparently, the 23-year-old wasn't a huge fan of his boss, and decided that a virtual, worldwide forum was the perfect place to vent his frustration. We have to wonder why he even bothered with the "serial masturbator" tag line. He just described half the people on Planet Earth for goodness sake (not to mention primates!).

Brothers and sisters around the world! Heed our advice! Facebook is a place to post pictures of you with beautiful people you barely know. Facebook is a place to be witty and slightly politically incorrect to people you want to impress. It is not a place to vent about people that could potentially fire you! Follow those simple guidelines and you should be just fine. [From: AFP/Google]

Web, Social Networking

Facebook Update Exposes Couple's Bank Fraud Romp



When a New Zealand couple applied to borrow $NZ10,000 (about $6,000) for the gas station they owned, they could not have possibly foreseen the windfall a simple computing error would bring them. And New Zealand's WestPac bank could not have possibly foreseen Facebook's role in the investigation of the $NZ10 million fraud.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, when New Zealanders Leo Gao and Kara Yang-Hurring recently found more than $6 million deposited into their bank account (due to a WestPac employee's accidental inclusion of a few extra zeroes), the couple wasted no time in fleeing with their bounty. New Zealand authorities have been tracking Gao and Yang-Hurring since, and were undoubtedly glad to encounter a bone-headed move by one of the couple's several hangers on.

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Web, Social Networking

Yet Someone Else Fired for Private Comments on MySpace


In the past we've shown plenty of examples of employees and students losing their jobs and receiving other sorts of punishment for comments and photos posted publicly on social networks like Facebook and MySpace. We've always advised you to lock down your security settings on these sites, but now it seems that's not enough, with the case of a woman getting fired for making comments on MySpace in private.

The woman, Doreen Marino, worked at a New Jersey restaurant and created a MySpace group with a number of her co-workers. In that group, Marino's colleagues all vented about their managers and, in some cases, their customers, too. The group was fully private and password protected.

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