InternetReputation.com Cautions Internet Restraint

InterneteReputation.com cites example of woman who posted her own mug shot

InternetReputation.com is the world's leading provider of online reputation management. It has been named the Tech Firm of the Year, and has been recognized by many top media outlets for its cutting edge technology in a burgeoning industry, including Forbes Magazine, CNBC, and True Wealth magazine.

The experts at InternetReputation.com have learned that almost anyone can get in trouble on the Internet. Too often, people become innocent victims of unfair attacks – the small business, for example, who becomes the target of an unhappy customer whose anger and vindictiveness is matched only by his tenacity.

InternetReputation.com is the industry leader in reputation management, and urges people to post with care

But the company also knows that too often, its clients have shot themselves in the foot by posting sensitive information to any number of social media sites, such as Facebook or Twitter. Photographs from a drunken bachelor party that should never have been shared beyond those directly involved have gone viral, leaving embarrassed people in their wake who have a lot of explaining and reputation management to do.

In such cases, InternetReputation.com has demonstrated its ability to get results, and to remove or suppress the information that might reflect a moment of poor judgment, but can haunt someone, and do serious damage to their reputation, for years to come.

The company sites the example of a woman who was arrested and briefly detained by police. Once the police let her go, she made a tweet about the arrest, and included a copy of her mugshot in her tweet. That mugshot wound up being shared more than one thousand times, according to published reports. Now that woman, who is not a client of InternetReputation.com, is facing an online reputation management crisis that, at best, may a long uphill battle, and at worst, an insurmountable problem.

Her case is extreme, but InternetReputation.com says it is a good example of a bad decision – a very bad decision. They caution all Internet users – and that is virtually everyone – to be very circumspect about the personal information that they tweet, post, or otherwise make available via social media or any other online forum. The notoriety that is potentially associated with negative information about someone can be very long-lasting, to say the least, and is hardly worth it.

Share:


Tags: Internet reputation management, negative content, viral posts