If the unsuspecting future
NFL star accepts it, suddenly, the teams evaluating them have access to their personal information and photos, which, could raise all sorts of questions about the athlete if they have anything unflattering in their profile.
Yahoo! Sports has all of the juicy details on the practice, noting that “creating fake profiles to get added to the private pages of some draft picks – isn’t isolated. Executives from three NFL teams admitted that at one point or another, they had used a similar method to get information. And all three suggested that it was something that was likely used by the investigative sources of all teams.”
What type of results has this type of lurking obtained for teams? Yahoo! Sports notes a few examples, including one where a prospect had pictures of drugs attached to social networking profile. Of course, like other celebrities, top athletes are photographed wherever they go, which has often led to embarrassment surfacing on the Web for everyone to see.
The bottom line is that while this feels like a huge invasion of privacy, it’s to be expected, and users – famous or not – need to take control of the tools available to them to keep unwanted information off the Web. That’s easier said than done for NFL prospects, some of who have probably been using Facebook long before they became public figures, but an unfortunate reality of the social web.
7 comments
The Terrel Owens Facebook comment is hilarious!
April 17, 2009 at 2:15 PMYeah, they're great, I couldn't resist that one!
April 17, 2009 at 2:19 PMI hope you don't mind if I use these images, great work
May 5, 2009 at 4:27 PMKind of dumb, I say things that aren't true all the time on Facebook...but then again, I'm not a potential NFL superstar!
May 5, 2009 at 9:54 PMThis is to be expected when using Social Networking tools such as Facebook. You are offering up intimate details of your life to the public people! ANything you do on a computer can be tracked, REMEMBER THAT!
May 19, 2009 at 4:16 PMRams suck, GO PATS!
May 21, 2009 at 1:57 AMWe see this kind of "detective work" all over the net and it's happening more and more. Think before you speak, because you can't cover your tracks in this virtual world.
May 21, 2009 at 10:50 AMPost a Comment