Thursday, August 30, 2007

I apologize, Quechup.com is a sham

Last night I made a major Faux-Paus and would like to apologize for falling into a trap, that an experienced web user should have avoided like the plague
Chances are you just received an email from me inviting you to join something called Quechup.com, a new (to me at least) social networking platform. In my professional as well as private life, sites like these have become more and more important. And since I work in interactive advertising, and I am constantly checking out new social platforms to find out what new features they come up with and how they could be put to use for our clients. When a friend of mine invited me to join Quechup.com , I tried it out.

I’ve been online now for about 15 years, and still, I’ve been had like a newbie. I am frustrated, furious, whatever but I can only expect anger, ridicule and a total loss of respect from colleagues, correspondents and friends.

The long and short : disregard and delete any invite you have received from me, inviting you to join Quechup.com. I did not send you this email, nor did I knowingly approve of it being sent to you. What
happened was this.

During the signup process, Quechup.com suggests it search your address book to check if some of your email contacts have already
signed up as well, so as to give the networking process a head start. We’ve seen this before with bonafide websites like
LinkedIn or Facebook (which, incidentally, i do vouch for, since they have never sent me any spam nor sent mail on behalf of me without my consent — so far, that is). So call me gullible, I gave it my details and indeed, found a couple of people already on the site (amongst whom the woman who had invited me).

What the site doesn’t mention, however, is that each and every address in your address book is invited to join as well, as if you agreed to it.

I smelled fire when I received invites at some of my other email adresses, and quickly checked the mailbox I had used to sign up to Quechup.com. By this morning, I had received enough replies and complaints, asking what this was all about, ridiculing me for being so stupid or actually spewing abuse for sending that email. I have since activated my own out-of-office assistant, with an apology in the message.

What is even more troubling, in my opinion, is that the site then goes on to search for any offline mail clients, such as Outlook or Outlook Express on your PC and suggest doing the same search with the address data it finds there. As I don’t use any offline clients, I didn’t use this “feature”. I can only shudder at the effect that would have, and what other havock sites like these can wreck in your email client.

I have deleted my own membership. If you or anyone receive an invitation to join, from me or anybody else, I advise you to delete the email.

I took this almost verbatim from http://www.sparehed.com/ , since it expresses my feelings exactly

3 comments:

Carol said...

This is happening with other Sites too. One called Trusted Opinion (I think that's right) did this to me and my little 10 year old neice got an invitation, the bad part of it is there was no way to delete the membership. I guess you just never know.

Jeff Herz said...

Carol,

At least I was able to cancel my membership at this site, so I have that going for me.

Jeff

Wim Lockefeer said...

Jeff - I've removed the page about quechup from my site (http://www.sparehed.com), as I think enough had been said about this. I'd be most obliged if you would replace the link from this post, with a link to my site's homepage (http://www.sparehed.com).

Thanks,

w/