SC World Congress Sound Bites

A Much delayed post, but I never got around to fitting it in while out of town. I attended last year’s SC Wold Congress in New York at the Sheraton. I look back on it now and it was influential in my search for new employment for companies on the leading edge of security.

I wanted to post up a few sound bites, I picked up from the congress… Note that these are now 9 months old:

In October 2009:
“If Facebook were a country it would be the 4th largest in the world”

“Ashton Kusher has more twitter followers than the entire population of Ireland”

“80% of companies today use social media in their recruiting process”

From the CSO of AT&T Stephen Hutnik, “70% of their bandwidth traffic is malicious or junk”

“AT&T is working on ‘Black Cloud’ services for intercepting and stopping DDoS attacks on their network, before they get to their intended targets”.

That last part concerns me as it involves the ISPs to get smart about the routes and type of traffic they are sending – which means they’ll have to scan it first to determine it’s nature and destination. Who’s to say what’s negative or positive, appropriate or indecent, private or public – privacy rights should be watched closely with what ever AT&T, Time Warner, Verizon or any other service provider decides what to do with traffic running over it’s networks.

Should you Friend your Mom and Dad?

Many of my female friends are pregnant this year. I hear they come in threes… and while writing this, my woman is on the phone to the third of our friends who’s just birthed a third. Confirming the theory (for now) and providing reassurance to the new parent about her eldest, now a new teenager, explicitly angry at her mom whom has retaliated by de-friending her father from Facebook. She’s 14 and pulling away from the parents; it happens.

So “defriending” has replaced storming down the hall and door slamming in the eyes of teenagers today? First it was calling your Mommy a Pooface (see note at left – thanks PassiveAgressiveNotes.com) to

I don’t yet understand the pain felt when your child is disappointed or just angered at you for your parental orders but I do understand it takes a lot of trust for a teenager to allow insight into their lives by “friending” them on a very public online social network. Social media is very personal and it’s becoming an online window into your personality, feelings, state of mind, intentions and outlooks on life.

When I was a teen, my life was a complete mystery to my parents. School was “fine”. “No I don’t have a girlfriend”, but I did have serious crushes on Mandy and Kierra who’s lockers were near mine. I really did like most of my teachers, even Mr. Moore who didn’t deserve all the hazing from the kids because of his “Jew-fro” as the kids teased, coaster size glasses and suffering from kyphosis which caused his hunched over demeanor. I was very smart, but I was also very socially awkward (stereotype achieved). I had bullies, but I also lashed out.

None of this was public knowledge except for private conversations with my friends. Today those social barriers of privacy are gone thanks to Google, Myspace, Twitter, Facebook and other internet services. Parents are now connected more than ever to their friends. I just received a friend request from my Mom’s best friend. 10 [no more like 5] years ago, I would never consider sharing more than a hello with her, and now she wants to read my weekly status messages and see what photos I post publicly? Maybe she doesn’t but it’s what that type of request means to me…

I’ve changed my views of social networking in the last few years and today believe if you’re using your real name and posting information about yourself on the very public internet, there should be no reason your parents, neighbors or boss shouldn’t be able to see that information. If you want to talk about illicit, uncomfortable or private matters on a public forum, learn to adopt an alias :P . Family is blood and no matter how embarrassing, private or painful your thoughts and actions are, that bond should never (seldom) break between the parent and child, and puberty aside, there should be no reason to keep anything from either in that family bond. This all being said while I’m well past my teenage years and playing a little “Monday Morning QB” on this subject….

Facebook has started to add some security where you can create a limited view group for people, allowing the child to virtually close the door on discussions they want to have private. But it takes a bit of knowledge and intent to keep this virtual wall up. Growing up you never really understand what your parents went through during parenthood until you’re several years past college graduation.

So sure, send that friend request for your parents but maybe… keep a few things still to your private self…

Facebook Punk’d Techcrunch

punkdI’m an avid reader of TechCrunch. Like most blogs they compete on the edge for eyeballs which puts most in the grey area of posting both actual news and rumor even without confirming from any discernible sources. TC does a good job on updating us all on Valley stories, news and tech but they still could benefit from getting off the iPhone jock and limiting useless rumors to focus their content. This is a great story of Facebook, setting up an actual feature and calling it to only those on the TC network; which in turn they put out there as a real feature without confirming it directly from Facebook (“Maybe I’m missing something here, but I’m not sure why Facebook would do this. “). Check the full Punk’d Story.