Should social networks be blocked at work?
Network World - One of the biggest trends in IT is how consumer products have crept into the enterprise, and the trend extends to Internet services. The ingenious thing about social networks such as Facebook and LinkedIn is that these consumer-oriented sites have become key tools for professionals.
Take journalists, for example. While reporters may still pound the pavement or work the phones to find stories, now sometimes a story can present itself in LinkedIn forums or through Facebook postings. Sometimes the social networks become an extension of the reporting team, in a practice called "crowdsourcing." And the reporter who used to appear as nothing more than a byline can now enter the conversation with instant feedback on a comment about a story.
But other professions have not embraced social networks so much, and indeed have viewed them as threats to security or productivity. Would users spend their days catching up with high school friends and playing Farmville on Facebook?
Remember when many IT departments were leery about users checking their personal email accounts from work, afraid they would click on a link and take down the entire network? While that danger still exists, it has been reduced a bit through the use of spam filters and user education. The same can be said for social networks, as IT staff can still provide general tips on what can be dangerous.
To continue reading, register here to become an Insider
It's FREE to join
Already an Insider? Sign in


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Activities Streams Base An Integrated Social Layer
- The enterprise social software market is exploding thanks to converging trends of consumerization, cloud, and mobile. In this must-read report, "The Forrester Wave:...
- Enabling Remote Employees with High Quality Video
- In this paper, we analyze the delivery of live and on-demand mobile video content. It focuses on specific ways in which organizations can...
- A "YouTube-like" Experience For Employees
- Leading research firms are predicting that video is becoming a key component of workplace collaboration. More and more, employees are creating and sharing...
- Business Video Empowers Social Media. Raising employee performance.
- The wisdom of a company resides in the heads of those directly responsible for the non-routine work of the organization. This, coupled with...
- Dynamic Video Collaboration in SharePoint.
- Driven by the adoption of social collaboration tools and video applications for employees, today's SharePoint managers are under more pressure than ever before... All Enterprise Web 2.0/Collaboration White Papers
- Workday's Mobile Solution for iPad
- Stay connected while on the go
As the workforce around the world becomes more mobile, enterprises are enabling their workers to stay informed... - Distributed Database Security with Real-time Monitoring
- View this demo and learn how IBM InfoSphere Guardium database activity monitoring can help protect your sensitive data in distributed DBMS environments with...
- InfoSphere Warehouse Packs Demo
- These flash modules make warehousing more tangible and relevant to business users through detailed explanations of the InfoSphere Warehouse Packs.
- Delivery Management -- Extending Lifecycle Management
- Date: Wednesday, June 20, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT
Siloed organizations continue doing the wrong things and doing things wrong, leading to increased costs,... - Leverage automation today to reduce IT complexity
- Date: Tuesday, June 5, 2012, 2:00 PM EDT
Whether your B2B complexity is caused by multiple technologies due to M&A, business or application specific...
All Enterprise Web 2.0/Collaboration Webcasts