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Survey: Half of Employees Blocked from Facebook at Work

Some 50 percent of workers are being blocked from accessing Facebook by their employers, who are ostensibly worried about the website’s impact on productivity and security, and have therefore put policies or access controls in place to ban its use in the workplace, according to research from Sophos, reports MarketingCharts.

In a poll of 600 workers, 43 percent said their company was blocking access to Facebook, while an additional 7 percent reported that usage of the social networking website was restricted and only those with a specific business requirement were allowed to access it, Sophos said.

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In contrast, 50 percent of respondents said their company did not block access to Facebook, with 8 percent specifying the reason as fear of employee backlash.

A second Sophos poll showed that 66 percent of workers themselves were concerned that their colleagues were sharing too much information on Facebook, which could lead to identity theft and targeted phishing attacks against the company.

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According to Sophos, a large number of Facebook profile pages contain users’ current employment details, which could be used together with other stolen information by cybercriminals bent on corporate fraud, or to infiltrate company networks.

Last week, Sophos published research showing that 41 percent of Facebook users were prepared to divulge personal information to a complete stranger (in the form of a small plastic frog called Freddi Staur).

“Companies are split on the question of Facebook. Some believe it to be a procrastinator’s paradise, which can lead to identity theft if users are careless. Others either view it as a valuable networking tool for workers or are too nervous of employees backlash if the site is suddenly blocked,” said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos.

“Companies need to make their own mind up as to whether they want to allow their users to access websites like Facebook and MySpace during office hours. If workers are allowed to be given access to these sites, then it’s imperative that they are taught best practices to ensure that they are not putting their personal and corporate data at risk. Five minutes spent learning the ins-and-outs of Facebook’s privacy settings, for instance, could save a lot of heartache later.”

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Katz Adds Lincoln Financial Media to Client List

Katz Media Group has added another new client, Lincoln Financial Media, and will sell ad time on the company’s 15 stations beginning immediately.

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‘Time’ Takes Top Magazine Slot for College Students

Time magazine ousted Cosmo as the top magazine for college students in this year’s Anderson Analytics fall survey.

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Despite Belt-Tightening, Out-of-Home Still Shows Promise

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CNN Floats More Affordable Wire Service to Newspapers

CNN plans to offer newspapers a wire service as an alternative to the Associated Press. CNN, which already runs an internal wire service, will explain its new, expanded service to editors from about 30 papers who are visiting Atlanta this…

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Icahn Snaps Up More Yahoo

Regulatory filings reveal that billionaire hedge-fund manager Carl Icahn bought nearly 7 million additional shares — about $67 million worth — of Yahoo.

The investor paid an average of $9.92 for each share over the course of three days, bringing…

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Online TV, Video & Phone Show Biggest Yearly Growth

Email, news gathering and paying bills continue to be the most widely used online activities among U.S. adults, but downloading TV programs, watching videos and making web phone calls posted the biggest overall growth, according to data from Mediamark Research…

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