The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Wired Campus

January 12, 2009

Should Colleges Warn Users About Twitter Scam?

Last week, a “phishing” scam struck Twitter, a micro-blogging service. It was a new problem for the latest species of social-networking site. And like most new problems involving such services, it challenged college administrators to determine how to address an issue that might affect students and professors.

As social networking has proliferated, especially at colleges, so have social-networking scams. Last month, it was a team of interlopers squatting in “Class of 2013” groups on Facebook for marketing purposes. This time, it was an Internet con artist baiting Twitter users into handing over their private log-in information.

West Virginia University’s Office of Information Technology was one college that cautioned its users about the Twitter scam, posting a brief warning on its own Twitter feed. Sarah Barnes, a Web developer for the university who posted the warning, said the volume of online scams makes it increasingly necessary for administrators to teach students how to avoid becoming victims.

Mark Greenfield, director of Web services at the State University of New York at Buffalo, argues that advising students on how to avoid Web scams should be part of a college’s duties in loco parentis. He said that administrators need to be “proactive, not reactive” about teaching students how to avoid online traps. “It’s part of computer literacy now,” he said.

In order to position themselves to authoritatively educate students about how to protect themselves online, Greenfield said administrators must not lag behind students in their familiarity with social networking risks and trends. —Steve Kolowich

Posted on Monday January 12, 2009 | Permalink |

Comments

  1. An interesting and understandable position but as a CIO I remain confused as to why there seems to be this need to send out warnings and such only about IT related issues. Is someone monitoring the auto recalls? Baby crib safety issues? Tainted lettuce updates? If the position is that this is somehow part of my duties to act as a parent on technology issues, why is it being limited to technology only?

    — rec    Jan 13, 08:21 AM    #

  2. Another interesting question would be: do students use Twitter? (and, is any warning worth the time and bandwidth?)

    For strange reasons, the Twitter craze seems to have started in older circles, the 30+ crowd.

    Have you seen a growing interest for Twitter among your current students?

    — Karine Joly    Jan 13, 09:27 AM    #

  3. Dumb question? If you don’t want people to get hurt, and you know something can hurt them, do you have a moral obligation to warn them of danger? Forget in loco parentis, its just common sense and common courtesy.

    — Mervyn Emrys    Jan 13, 04:21 PM    #

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