By Michelle V. Rafter
When someone on Twitter impersonated Britney Spears it was kind of funny.
But nobody laughed when someone claiming to be St. Louis Cardinals Manager Tony La Russa used Twitter to make insensitive remarks about the team -- remarks that led the real La Russa to sue the company for a damaged reputation and emotional distress.
Twitter and La Russa quickly settled their differences. But the incident is one of the latest reminders that not everyone online is who they say they are.
As you and your brother, father and grandfather join social networks, leave comments on blogs and spend more time on the Internet, it’s become important to protect your online identity, including verifying yourself in the electronic communities you frequent. If not, you leave yourself open to social media identity theft, says Robert Siciliano, a Boston-based Internet security consultant. “Anybody can adopt anybody else’s name if it’s available,” Siciliano says. “They could take your picture if it’s online somewhere too, and write a blog as you and post comments as you.”
If you’re applying to colleges or searching for a job, and someone appropriated your name to post nasty comments, “it could do some serious damage,” Siciliano says.
Protect your online persona
Twitter’s first step toward a solution was to offer verified accounts to celebrities, politicians and other public figures such as La Russa. Verified accounts for all Twitter users are rumored to be coming soon.
Other social networks are taking different approaches. If you’re on Facebook, you can now sign up to use your name as your Facebook URL, one way to prevent someone else from grabbing it first. On LinkedIn, you can alert the customer service team if you see an inappropriate member profile, including profiles that look like fakes.
Internet security and personal branding experts also suggest taking these actions to protect and verify your identity online:
What if you catch someone impersonating you online? Notify the social network, website host or service provider immediately and “bother the heck out of them until they do something about it,” says Siciliano, the identity theft expert. If someone’s stolen your identity online and used it to create a fake ID or open a bank account, contact your local law enforcement department, Siciliano says. “It’s the wild, wild Web and you need to learn what’s going on out there and what you can do to be proactive so when your information is compromised you have a plan of action in place.”
Michelle V. Rafter is a journalist based in Portland, Oregon. She's spent more than 20 years writing about business and technology for magazines, newspapers, wire services and websites.
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