Monthly Archive for May, 2009

Just Landed in Twitterland

I just searched a person’s tweets and found a tweet that said he had just landed at a major airport and was going through customs. The date and the time of the message, and knowledge of where he lived, allowed me to identify his flight.

A twitter search for this term was interesting. I found a lot of messages with the term “just landed”.  I could also translate this phrase into any language and probably find similar messages.

This “just landed” search could be useful for finding assets, competitive intelligence, and other things in which an Investigator or Researcher might be interested.

Social Sites Subpoenaed

Walmart was permitted by the Colorado courts to subpoena  Facebook, Myspace and Meetup.com for the profiles of several employees that were suing the retailer regarding work related injuries.

I wrote about a similar Canadian case that established that what you find in Google, other search engines, and unrelated Facebook pages may be used as the basis for a motion for the production of the subject’s entire Facebook page as happened in KOURTESIS V. JORIS (2007).  Another Canadian case is Murphy v. Perger, [2007] O.J. No. 5511 (S.C.J.) (QL). These cases are becoming more common and of greater significance as social sites become a larger part of our lives.

Craigslist Dirty Talk Conviction

A Wisconsin woman has been convicted of disorderly conduct for posting her ex-boyfriend’s work telephone number and photos under the “casual encounters” section of Craigslist, encouraging men to “talk dirty to me.”

The 20-year-old has been ordered to write an apology and perform community service for the misdemeanor charge, and should consider herself lucky. She was originally charged with identity theft, a felony that would have entailed time in an unflattering orange jumpsuit.

Very Strange PI News Story

The strange case of the private detective who isn’t

By David Baines, Vancouver Sun columnist

Of all the stories I have written, the story of Brian Van Vlack is the most bizarre.

Van Vlack runs a private investigation firm called Pursuit International Investigations from his home in Surrey. Late last year, he called to advise that a crook named Fred Gilliland had returned to Vancouver.

The story goes on to tell how the PI who helped arrest the crook  who had conned him out of $200,000 in 2005, was now working with Gilliland in one of his crooked stock promotions schemes.

Secure File Delivery

Delivery of large reports and file material is becoming a problem for many organisations. Electronic file delivery poses risks to the integrity and security of the data, and delivery of printed copies is too slow and expensive. Email delivery is not possible in many cases as the files may be too large, even when zipped.

You can resort to establishing an FTP site of your own, or create a secure delivery site using something like OWL, or use a third party service.

A usable third party solution to this problem is YouSendIt. This lets you send and receive files up to 2GB in size. A zipped 2GB file represents a large volume of data. Passwords control access to files you are sending and receiving, but YouSendIt does not encrypted files on their servers.

Regardless of the solution selected, the person transmitting the data must assume responsibility for the encryption. Never, ever, let somebody else take responsibility for the encryption — do it yourself on your own computer.

FriendDeck

FriendFeed, allows people to aggregate their activities across the social web. It is a great place to find what sorts of things people are talking about. In some ways, FriendFeed is better for “real-time” web searches than Twitter because a FriendFeed search will not only return Twitter posts, but also shared RSS feeds, Facebook status updates, items posted natively in FriendFeed itself, stories being promoted on social news web sites like Digg.com, and much more. However, unlike Twitter, FriendFeed’s user population is smaller and tends to consist of people who are more technology-focused, so the results will be somewhat skewed in that direction.Although useful, searching FriendFeed today still leaves a lot to be desired. That’s where FriendDeck can help. After authenticating with your FriendFeed username and remote key, you can kick off searches from the box at the top of the FriendDeck window. Each search term will then display in its own column within FriendDeck. The end result is a web app that very much resembles the TweetDeck’s desktop application, which also lets you display search terms in columns. However, unlike FriendDeck, TweetDeck additionally lets you organize your Twitter friends into groups in order to follow and track different sets of users along with your search queries.

FriendDeck is a web-based interface for searching the social web aggregation service, FriendFeed. It can also be downloaded and used as an Adobe AIR desktop application. FriendDeck isn’t based on TweetDeck. However, you can also search Twitter from inside FriendDeck. Use the command twitter:search term

FriendDeck displays search results in columns, allowing you to track multiple search terms within the same window. As the individual items appear, you have the option of clicking “like” or commenting online on the postings.

What FriendDeck Won’t Do

Unfortunately, FriendDeck only allows monitoring of searches, not groups. Perhaps because FriendFeed already includes a “lists” feature, FriendDeck’s creator didn’t include the ability to simultaneously track different groups of people. That’s disappointing, since tracking lists (groups) on FriendFeed means having to constantly switch between them to see the latest news from each group.  I would like an application that tracks lists, rooms, and search terms.

What FriendDeck Can Do

That said, there are still a couple of tricks you can do with FriendDeck in order to see more than just traditional searches. You can also:

  • See a user’s likes – type in the query likes:{username}
  • See a user’s comments – type in the query comments:{username}
  • See a user’s friends – type in the query friends:{username}
  • A list of posts relating to a URL – type in the query url:{url.com}
  • A list of posts about a domain – type in the query domain:{domain}

Although those custom queries are certainly handy, I would like to see FriendDeck do more.

Handy Internet Gadget

If you are having trouble connecting to something on the Internet, it would be nice to know if anybody else can get to the site you are trying to get to.

Down for everyone or just me? answers this question for you.

We’ve Moved

Pitfalls of Shared Web Hosting

We are on a new web host. They are better than the last bunch. However I have some observations about shared hosting companies in general.

  • All such companies make promises they don’t keep. If a web host says they will move your site — it won’t happen or they will mess it up. You will have to do it yourself or hire a professional to complete the move.
  • Email will be a headache. Nobody tells you how to access your email unless you use Outlook or Thunderbird. They say you are incompetent if you don’t use one of these two email clients.
  • Small problems turn into big problems because of the interaction between ISP, web host, and client software.
  • Web hosting companies, ISP’s, etc., etc., all think they are alone in the world and rarely make any effort to understand how to interact in a productive way. If they do make the effort, they seem unable to communicate to their customers how to make thing work together.
  • Extensive investigation to find the causes of problems is your job, even if the web host caused the problem.
  • Answering a support request in an unhelpful manner is worse than not answering.
  • Web host operations think they are selling technology to geeks, when in reality, they are selling a service to ordinary people with some technical knowledge. They don’t understand that a service is something that takes away the customer’s pain rather than adding to it.

Canadian Charities

Researching Canadian charities is a difficult and frustrating undertaking. Here is the short course in starting an investigation of a Canadian charity.

To determine if a charity is registered by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA), go to the Charities Listings page. The most useful filing of a charity is the T3010 form. This is the annual information filing that must be completed each year.

I wish that a quick read of a charity’s financial statements or its T3010 annual return or a calculation of its disbursement quota would tell one about the real administration and fund-raising costs and the real effectiveness and importance of a charity’s work. Usually, some research is in order – read the charity’s annual report, review its website, review its T3010 and search on director, donor, and recipient names, it may be enlightening to see the relationships exposed by this type of search. Then, if you have any concerns, call the charity and see what they have to say.

The Globe and Mail each week provides a short profile of a major donor and the charity that received the donation as well as discusses the donor’s motivation in making the donation. This makes searching the charity name in the Globe and Mail worthwhile. Searching The Toronto Star is also a good idea as their reporter, Kevin Donovan, writes about the worst examples of misdeeds by charities in Canada.

Web Hosts Face the Jury

If you are looking for a new web host, then go to HostJury.com and look at what their customers say about them.