Priveyo Private Social Network

Priveyo Private Social Network

Monday, August 26, 2013

A Private Social Network Make Perfect Sense For Companies

Private Social Network
Social networks, such as Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Linked In, work great for companies that desire to engage the public and customers to build a brand or increase revenue. Likewise, a company can also grow and become more efficient if it exchanges immediate and direct feedback with its employees and vendors. However, employees, vendors and stakeholders cannot use public social media to air their views, since their postings can be sensitive or could be construed as a breach of confidentiality.

This is where a private social network can step in to help.

How Does Private Social Media Help Companies

Private social media allows globally-situated managers and employees to discuss creative ideas and innovations. Managers can cut through department lines and exchange their work experience. Employee groups can brainstorm over complex issues that require a creative solution. Managers and teams can plan product launches while on the go. All this can be done in the secure confines of a virtual private room that is not open to prying eyes.

Such networks allow small groups with common interests to meet at a secure place and exchange confidential information or make plans to achieve their goals.

Professional organizations can in fact grow their business and networks by working on such sites. For example, the Martindale-Hubble division of Lexis Nexis allows lawyers located around the world to find and network with each other in its members-only private community site. This private community, which is regarded as more powerful than Google in its niche, helps members find and hire specialized legal professionals. Palladium, a company that deals in education, has also tasted success by opening a private community. We can list many other examples, but these will suffice.

People have begun to realize that a niche and deeply focused community can offer greater returns to its members than public social media. Contact is consistent and member engagement is far more informative and rewarding in such communities.

Private networks help fulfilling members’ expectations in a more satisfying way than public networks mainly because the information is deep, relevant, and consistent. Members get their privacy, and they know that the person they are interacting with is serious because he is a like-minded professional. Such networks enable fast decision-making and take collaborations to a completely new level.

To Sum Up

Like it or not, private social networks are here to revolutionize the way business is conducted. This is not to suggest that such networks will benefit at the expense of public social networks like Facebook, LinkedIn and the like – both type of networks will co-exist and continue to grow.

Companies and businesses that want to drive deeper engagement with their suppliers or employees, or attend to customers with grievances, will rely on private media. They will continue using the public networks to build an online brand, enhance Page Authority, improve PageRank and increase revenue.

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

5 Reasons Your Class Group Needs Online Privacy

When you are trying to communicate with a study group over social media, you need a way to keep your messages somewhat private. It's not that you're planning to overthrow the classroom or boycott the exam, but rather that the information your class has is what the studying needs to take place around, not what outsiders may want to include. Here are X reasons why a study group needs to have online privacy.

Class Paces

 Even though your instructor teaches the same class five different times this semester, not every class is at the same point when it comes time to take the midterm exam. Classes that meet three days a week may be a little further ahead than those that meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays only. By the same token, the Wednesday night class could be so far ahead of everyone else that the instructor has been adding extra information in an attempt to slow their progress down. Since each class is at a different place in their studies, it is important that each class have social media privacy in order to study only their own materials. Tuesdays and Thursdays only.

Special Assignments

There are special circumstances in college classes where the instructor may offer one class the option of doing additional make-up work in order to save their grades. You need the online privacy to discuss this without getting all of the other classes jealous over the fact that more than half of your class is failing. This is extra work for your class, not an opportunity that is available to everyone, and it needs to remain that way.

Instructor Participation

When you are planning study group meetings, if someone happens to be brave enough to invite the professor to come and help, then everyone in the class will benefit from the situation. However, those from other classes, who may be at different locations in the text, would only be hindered by attending your study sessions. You need a social media privacy app that can let only your class communicate.

Classroom Questions

If you have a question about some part of the subject you are learning, it can be embarrassing enough to ask just your own class. You will get the answer that you need and be able to continue with your studies, but your class will know that you needed the help. If you were faced with the prospect of asking that question in front of students from all five of the classes your professor teaches, you probably wouldn't be brave enough to ask it. With your online privacy guaranteed, you will know the question won't go beyond your classroom.

Classroom Discussions

If your class wants to continue your discussion online once the class has finished, you will be able to do so if you have a social media privacy. Talk with your classmates and encourage others to learn more information as well, so that everyone in your class can benefit from a private meeting place.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Why You Should Use A Privacy App For Sharing Personal Details

Image courtesy by: spartandaily.com
Have you ever tried to share your cell phone number over social media, say, with family members or a specific group of friends? If you have, you probably learned the hard way that announcing your number online is akin to asking for prank calls. The situations that you share your number in are usually emergencies, and the last thing you want is some teenager from six states away prank calling your cell at 4 in the morning to get a kick.

What you need is a privacy app that takes its users privacy seriously. Priveyo wants you to know that if you ever need to share your cell number through our social media app with one of our private groups, it will stay within the group itself. The way that your number gets away from you is easy to track down on mainstream social media sites, but rarely realized by its users.

Every time you make a post on social media, it automatically goes out to all of your friends. Even when that post is made in a private group, it still gets broadcast that you made it. All of your friends get to see the cell phone number that you put out so that your extended family members could contact you for information in the face of this family crisis. Every time one of your family members or friends makes a comment on that post, the fact that they made a comment is announced to all of their friends, including a copy of their comment and your original, cell phone number containing post.

Suddenly, all of that person's friends have access to your cell phone number. As more comments are made, the contents of that original post spread, until some teenager in Alaska grabs your number and decides to have some fun. If you want to prevent from needing to change your cell phone number yet again when the emergency has passed, then you need a social media app that focuses on privacy for its users.

Priveyo is a privacy app that is designed to take the world of social media to an entirely new level. Our social media app has been carefully constructed to permit the creation of groups that are so secretive that no one can gain access to them unless they are specifically invited by the group's founder. We don't re-broadcast your information with each post or comment. It is our belief that if you wanted this information to be shared with everyone, you would have told everyone on your own.

The next time that you need to announce your cell number to a specific group of people, rely on Priveyo's privacy app settings to keep your number where only those you intended to can see it. You can concentrate on whatever happened to cause you to share your cell number with the group, and we will handle the privacy through our social media app, passwords and locked groups.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Use A Private Social Network To Keep Family Matters Private

Private Social Network
Image Courtesy of: digitaltrends.com/

Using social media to make important family announcements has its drawbacks. Your friends are always quicker to respond than your family members are, or so it seems. If you've got a private family matter that needs to get out to family members quickly, then you need a private social network that will allow you to do precisely that.

The problem with social media privacy is that the major forms of social media don't give you any real options about it. Even if you have a family only group that you can make announcements in, the minute that someone in your family makes a comment about the announcement, it stops being private and jumps so that every one of their friends can see it and make comments on it as well. So much for family privacy.

If you need a way to keep your friends out of family matters, then what you need is Priveyo's private social network. When Priveyo gives you a private, family only group space, they deliver with all sincerity. There are multiple ways that you can set up your family groups to achieve this privacy, but ultimately, Priveyo will keep that privacy for your family simply because they don't make a big deal out of when someone makes a comment.

When you make a family announcement, whether it is to announce a birth, a wedding, a hospital stay, or a graduation, your family members are naturally going to want to make comments about it. Whereas other forms of social media announce said family member's comment to their entire friends list, Priveyo will do no such thing.

Our social media privacy viewpoint is that if you wanted others to know about your announcement, you would have made it publicly, rather than on your family's private social network. We leave it up to you to decide who should know what, and don't go repeating your comment with excited announcements outside of your family page. We may not be able to stop your Aunt Sally from repeating the announcement on her own public page, but rest assured that this breach of family privacy will be on Aunt Sally's head, not ours.

We take your social media privacy as a very important matter, and we at Priveyo want you to feel confident in our promise toward group privacy. Whether your group is for your family, your workplace, or your friends, we treat every group with the same private social network seriousness.

If you want others to be able to find your group, but not join uninvited, then you can protect your group with our password protection options. Even if someone unwanted does get in, simply change the password and they're not in your group anymore. For the most delicate of family matters, the private social network setting will prevent new members from gaining access unless they are specifically invited by the group's founder. With Priveyo, private family matters will be private once again.







Friday, August 2, 2013

Why Facebook is Losing its Appeal


Teens In Social Media Sites
Image Courtesy by: wordpress.com

Teens ages 14-17, also known as young millennials, are slowly starting to abandon their Facebook accounts and are moving onto more private social media networking circles. In a recent study, MTV surveyed teens in this age bracket about how they stay in contact with their friends. Facebook and even texting aren’t high on the list.

Surprisingly Snapchat, Instagram and Twitter are the most common forms of communication among teens. Survey participants said they are not deleting, but checking in on their Facebook accounts less because, “it’s full of older people now.

 These teens are seeking smaller, more private circles. Though Snapchat, as we have discovered, maybe isn’t the most private social media, Instagram and Twitter have simple privacy settings that can lock down a user’s account with one click of a mouse. Facebook’s privacy settings take a lot of time, reading and thought about just how private you’d like your account to be.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Even Private Social Media May Not Be As Private As You Think

Image source: smcdallas.org
As of late, Federal Agencies have permission to monitor social media to assess how users and the public feel about and use their social programs. Though this monitoring should be transparent, it’s used to collect data at general level, not personal one.

 Friending, following or communicating with users being monitored is not allowed. The agencies monitoring accounts are technically only allowed to extract information that is needed to fulfill the initial reason for monitoring in the first place. (Most commonly in the case of situational Awareness Campaigns featured on social media).

The privacy guide being used under these circumstances encourages agencies to use social media to investigate certain instances such as to determine if someone lied on an application, or to verify the professional level of a prospective employee. The key here is that these agencies stay completely transparent. You may not know if someone is accessing your accounts.

Private Social Media App: http://priveyo.com/