FACEBOOK STATUS

தொழில் நுட்பவளர்ச்சி அனைத்திலும் நன்மையும் தீமையும் கலந்தே இருக்கின்றன. ஆதலால் ஒட்டுமொத்தமாக எல்லாவற்றையும் தவிர்த்துவிட முடியாது எனினும் அவற்றிலிருந்து நன்மையை மட்டும் எடுத்துக் கொள்ளும் அறிவையும் பக்குவத்தையும் நாம் பெறவேண்டும். இருந்தாலும் குறிப்பாக இந்த FACEBOOK பயன்பாடு தீமைக்கு தான் முதன்மை இடத்தை கொடுக்கிறது. ஆதலால் நன்மை -தீமைகளை புரிந்து FACEBOOKகை பயன்படுத்த தெரியவேண்டும் இல்லையென்றால் FACEBOOKகை விட்டு வெளியேறுவதே சிறந்தது.



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Facebook Crime and Punishment


As we're sure you're all aware by now, Facebook, when used recklessly, can get you into trouble. Firings, break-ups and general forehead-slapping missteps are no strangers to the social networking site. But Facebook trouble can be much more grave than all that. Look behind the break and catch a glimpse of Facebook's dark criminal underbelly, if you dare.

Blackmail
Sending any personal info or incriminating pictures to someone on Facebook is a huge mistake for many reasons. One of the
worst possible outcomes is getting blackmailed for money, sex, or, well, anything these sickos dream up. Really, whether they're using a fake profile or not, it's a horrible idea. Read up on the story of an 18-year-old who blackmailed 31 male classmates after he posed as a girl and asked for nude pictures. That's lesson enough.

Impostors
Sure, it can be harmless to
impersonate a celeb online or create a fake profile for a movie character. But seriously, there's a definite line you shouldn't cross when pretending to be someone else and it can lead to dire consequences for you. Maybe it's not as extreme as the Moroccan man who was jailed for 43 days after creating a fake Facebook profile of a prince, but you never know. Just steer clear of it.

Self-Incrimination
Do we really have to explain this? Just look up the
shoplifter who posed with her stolen merchandise, the many photos of drunk underage teens, and, most recently, the album featuring a couple who killed and ate an endangered iguana in the Bahamas.

Suicide
Social networking sites has been blamed for a lot of things, fairly and unfairly, but in our opinion, the worst offense has been their indirect involvement in suicides. Obviously, there are a lot of factors responsible in each case, but there does seem to be links between
social networking and a rash of suicides, and obviously there's the tragic case of Megan Meier, who killed herself after a classmate's mom impersonated a teen boy and harassed her over Myspace.

Murder
We've reported on numerous incidents of people getting in trouble because of their online behavior. Now, people are becoming victims because of what they're doing on the Web too. In England, a man was
convicted of murdering his estranged wife after she changed her relationship status to "single." So, be careful of who can see your profile and what you're doing, no matter how harmless it seems.

Nigerian Scammers
Oh, you thought
this only happened via poorly worded emails, right? Wrong. Once people got wise to their old ways, these con men started turning to social networking sites for new targets. Now, they're hacking into people's accounts and impersonating them to ask for money, usually with some weird sob story. You can check out a transcript of one of these conversations here.

Cooperation
Even
if the law isn't on a case, a victim, his friends, or empathetic strangers might be. Since it's easy to get word out for anything online, people are using blogs, forums, and social networking sites to help track down criminals. In one such case, a vehicle thief was tracked down by a bunch of anonymous car enthusiasts after the victim posted his story on a forum. In the end, they identified the guy through his Facebook profile.