Showing posts with label SOCIAL NETWORK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SOCIAL NETWORK. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Google+ Scam Spreading Via Fake Invites [WARNING]


Malicious hackers have targeted Google’s social networking service, Google+, for the first time in a scam that involves fake invites to the service, Naked Security reports.
The fake invites are spreading through e-mail, and they look very similar to the actual invites to the service, down to the e-mail address which seems to be coming from a Google+ member.
However, if you click on a link in the message – which we definitely do not recommend – you’ll land at a site trying to send you penis enlargement products.
Scams such as this one are very common with major product launches; most recently, we’ve seen a similar phishing scheme involving Google Music invites. Whenever you receive an “invite” to a service, especially from a third party, be extra careful before clicking any links and make sure that the invite is really coming from a legitimate source.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Google+ Invite Process Shut Down Amid 'Insane Demand'


A day after Google unveiled its brand new social networking service Google+, the company decided to open up the invitation process late Wednesday afternoon to those lucky enough to have already been invited to participate in the service.


Previously, the keys to Google+ were only held by those select few who had been allowed in at launch. Thus, an invite was a prized commodity. I was one of those lucky few thanks to Harry McCracken over at Technologizer. Thus I got an early look at Google's new social network.

Gold rush begins, and ends


Google has stressed that Google+ is in its early stages. However, whatever Google was aiming for with its "field trial" must have been successful, because as everyone who was invited in to the service is now able to invite other people in.


Even the second wave of invitees was able to invite friends to join the service.


Better yet, those writing about the decision to open up the invitation process suddenly found themselves popular with readers: TechCrunch's MG Siegler wrote on his Google+ page on his own story that "I'm not sure any TechCrunch post has gotten comments at such a fast rate." Of course you could debate the merits of posting your personal e-mail address just for an invite to another social network, but I digress.


All this attention must have been a bit more than Google bargained for. After about six hours, the company shut the invitation process down over what Google's senior vice president of engineering, Vic Gundotra, called "insane demand."


"We need to do this carefully, and in a controlled way," he posted to his Google+ page late Wednesday night. He did not specify when the invite functionality would return.

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