Blog Carlos de Miguel

En busca de la reputación perdida

1 comentario

El paisaje de la Red no para de cambiar, y comienza a sentirse una sensación de lleno y de agobio – que se lo digan a Miley Cyrus (Hannah Montana) que pocos días atrás decidió cerrar su cuenta de Twitter y decir adiós a todos aquellos que no paraban de husmear en su tweets en busca de titulares.

Ortega y Gasset habló mucho y bien sobre el asunto en su conocido libro La Rebelión de las Masas.

Algunos pueden interpretar esto como una excentricidad de la joven, pero el asunto es peliagudo.

Y es que la buena de Miley Cyrus al igual que otros muchos, y aunque parezca mentira, recién comienzan a descubrir que la Red es un espacio de uso público.  No son pocos los que han venido comportándose en la Red como si estuvieran en el salón de su casa celebrando una fiesta con los amigos.

Y, ahora, expuesta la intimidad y la privacidad empiezan a notar las consecuencias de lo que parecía inócuo.

El enorme éxito de los social media se ha basado en ese comportamiento entre ingenuo e irresponsable que ha venido caracterizando el uso de la Red en los últimos tiempos en relación con la propia privacidad e intimidad.

Aunque lo parezca, la Red no es un medio caracterizado por la inmediatez, sus efectos se presentan siempre a medio y largo plazo. Y esto es así porque nuestra identidad en la Red se construye por decantación o sedimentación, y no adquiere forma y textura hasta que todos esas pequeñas pistas se acomodan.

Algunos han querido ver cambios en la idea de intimidad producto de la irrupción de los social media, y ha surgido un interesante debate sobre sus límites en personas no públicas.  Incluso se ha popularizado el concepto de extimidad como un intento de dar cobertura conceptual a esa actitud despreocupada hacia lo intimo y personal.

El caso es que son muchos, y no solo Miley Cyrus, los que intentan desandar lo caminado, y están buscando desesperadamente una solución para recuperar la reputación perdida, y parecen haber encontrado el chivo expiatorio en Google.

Google lo sabe bien e intenta echar balones fuera…

Privacidad

Privacidad

MANAGING YOUR REPUTATION THROUGH SEARCH RESULTS

A few years ago I couldn’t wait to get married. Because I was in love, yeah, but more importantly, so that I could take my husband’s name and people would stop getting that ridiculous picture from college as a top result when they searched for me on Google.

After a few years of working here, though, I’ve learned that you don’t have to change your name just because it brings up some embarrassing search results. Below are some tips for “reputation management”: influencing how you’re perceived online, and what information is available relating to you.

Think twice

The first step in reputation management is preemptive: Think twice before putting your personal information online. Remember that although something might be appropriate for the context in which you’re publishing it, search engines can make it very easy to find that information later, out of context, including by people who don’t normally visit the site where you originally posted it. Translation: don’t assume that just because your mom doesn’t read your blog, she’ll never see that post about the new tattoo you’re hiding from her.

Tackle it at the source

If something you dislike has already been published, the next step is to try to remove it from the site where it’s appearing. Rather than immediately contacting Google, it’s important to first remove it from the site where it’s being published. Google doesn’t own the Internet; our search results simply reflect what’s already out there on the web. Whether or not the content appears in Google’s search results, people are still going to be able to access it — on the original site, through other search engines, through social networking sites, etc. — if you don’t remove it from the original site. You need to tackle this at the source.

If the content in question is on a site you own, easy — just remove it. It will naturally drop out of search results after we recrawl the page and discover the change.

It’s also often easy to remove content from sites you don’t own if you put it there, such as photos you’ve uploaded, or content on your profile page.

If you can’t remove something yourself, you can contact the site’s webmaster and ask them to remove the content or the page in question.

After you or the site’s webmaster has removed or edited the page, you can expedite the removal of that content from Google using our URL removal tool.

Proactively publish information

Sometimes, however, you may not be able to get in touch with a site’s webmaster, or they may refuse to take down the content in question.

For example, if someone posts a negative review of your business on a restaurant review or consumer complaint site, that site might not be willing to remove the review. If you can’t get the content removed from the original site, you probably won’t be able to completely remove it from Google’s search results, either. Instead, you can try to reduce its visibility in the search results by proactively publishing useful, positive information about yourself or your business. If you can get stuff that you want people to see to outperform the stuff you don’t want them to see, you’ll be able to reduce the amount of harm that that negative or embarrassing content can do to your reputation.

You can publish or encourage positive content in a variety of ways:

Create a Google profile. When people search for your name, Google can display a link to your Google profile in our search results and people can click through to see whatever information you choose to publish in your profile.

If a customer writes a negative review of your business, you could ask some of your other customers who are happy with your company to give a fuller picture of your business.

If a blogger is publishing unflattering photos of you, take some pictures you prefer and publish them in a blog post or two.

If a newspaper wrote an article about a court case that put you in a negative light, but which was subsequently ruled in your favor, you can ask them to update the article or publish a follow-up article about your exoneration. (This last one may seem far-fetched, but believe it or not, we’ve gotten multiple requests from people in this situation.)

Hope these tips have been helpful! Feel free to stop by our Web Search Forum and share your own advice or stories about how you manage your reputation online.

Posted by Susan Moskwa, Webmaster Trends Analyst (The Official Google Blog)

Quizá te interese también:

  1. En busca de la reputación perdida (II)
  2. En busca de la Privacidad perdida – Facebook!
  3. Fidel Santiago
  4. Red social a jucio
  5. Privacidad digital

Escrito por Carlos de Miguel

October 16th, 2009 at 10:56 am

Incluido Social Media, Tendencias

Etiquetado como

1 comentario a 'En busca de la reputación perdida'

Suscríbete a los comentarios vía RSS o TrackBack a 'En busca de la reputación perdida'.

  1. [...] Ayer escribía sobre esa búsqueda de la reputación perdida que muchos están iniciando tras utilizar, por ignorancia o irresponsabilidad, un espacio público como es la Red como si estuvieran en casa con amigos. [...]

Deja tu comentario

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes