PCWorld: How to Protect Your Reputation Online
“Several months ago when Twitter introduced its lists feature, social media consultant Allen Mireles checked to see which lists included her. “I wanted to see if the lists I was on were a reflection of how I wanted to be viewed on Twitter,” she says. She found two surprises: A porn star had included her on a list and another user listed her under “people I’ve seen naked” — a surprise, she says, because she had never met the person.
Mireles responded immediately. First she blocked the porn star on Twitter, which automatically removed her from the list. Then she sent a direct message to the owner of the other list and explained that she uses Twitter for business purposes and didn’t think it was appropriate to include her on it. ‘He very kindly took me off the list and apologized, saying he had been trying to make some of his lists ‘more interesting,” Mireles says.”