'We have a responsibility:' Trudeau urges global leaders to support pact for future
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is telling world leaders to either bury their heads in the sand or put differences aside for the sake of future generations.
Potential employees鈥 online 鈥榝ootprint鈥 might sway employers opinion to the point where they might hire someone else, one social media expert warns, but there are ways job-seekers can do some preemptive damage control.
鈥淲e鈥檙e one search away from an opportunity actually escaping us,鈥 Mohit Rajhans, co-founder of digital consulting firm Think Start Inc., told CTV鈥檚 Your Morning on Tuesday, stressing the importance of conducting so-called digital audits of your presence online.
Companies are fiercely protective of their brand and are now more eager than ever to know the digital histories of new hires, as well as existing employees they鈥檙e trying to let go.
To avoid having your 鈥渄igital footprint鈥 becoming a liability, Rajhans said the name of the game ought to be: 鈥渟taying positive and staying private.鈥
Nearly every social media platform has privacy settings which limit what is publicly searchable. Find the settings and change them if they鈥檙e not strict enough, he said.
Going forward, he urged people to only share certain Facebook posts to your friend list; put personal Instagram pages on private; use the Close Friends sharing featuring on IG stories; lock your Twitter feed; and have separate social media accounts 鈥 one for the public and another only accessible by people you approve.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a good idea -- especially if your business requires a lot of your effort and your thought leadership 鈥 to really separate the personal from the professional.鈥
He reminded people that most sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, have features in their settings which allow you to also download all the data attached to your profile.
So Rajhans said it鈥檚 also good idea to do that and take stock of what鈥檚 out there. "Understand how your data is being used on social media and how it鈥檚 being linked to.鈥
Rajhans said the recent approach by many Generation X and Millennial folks has been to share a lot. But now there鈥檚 been a shift, led by post-Millennials, to 鈥渞eally focus on what their online identity is, to prevent problems in the future.鈥
But with some people having three decades worth of social media out there, unfortunately, a lot of what comes up on Google or Facebook searches may seem beyond users鈥 control.
鈥淲hen people include us in conversations via blogs or professional things that we do, those are also tagged as part of our footprint,鈥 Rajhans said. 鈥淵ou could be captured in many different ways and places that don鈥檛 necessarily completely go on-brand with you right now.鈥
So, he said to do an immediate triage of your online persona: delete those embarrassing photos you posted years back; ask that friend to remove the tag of you from their picture galleries; and delete that tweet of a belief you no longer hold or one that you don鈥檛 want people to know publicly.
鈥淵ou won鈥檛 be able to erase certain things but my [encouragement] to you is clean up your algorithm yourself,鈥 Rajhans said, explaining this can be done simply by posting 鈥渂etter stuff online.鈥
鈥淪tart to feed what you want people to see about you -- in the context that you want people to see,鈥 he said, noting that people should post new tweets, IG posts or blogs which better showcase themselves.
For example, for those who work with coding, beef up your presence on sites such as GitHub. But what he said most of us can do is create or overhaul LinkedIn pages, so that it becomes one of the first things that pop up when strangers Google you.
鈥淯se that as the prime focus that people are able to find you in. And the other stuff starts to get buried.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is telling world leaders to either bury their heads in the sand or put differences aside for the sake of future generations.
An Edmonton man says he was in the wrong place at the wrong time when he was injured by members of the Edmonton Police Service last year.
The head of the Air Canada pilots union says she'll step down if members opt not to approve a tentative deal with the airline, raising the stakes as aviators mull whether to accept hefty salary gains or drive an even harder bargain.
Unifor says workers at General Motors' CAMI assembly plant and battery facility in southwestern Ontario have ratified a new collective agreement.
The brother of a 27-year-old man who was fatally shot in Scarborough over the weekend has been arrested and charged in connection with his death, say police.
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Kate, the Princess of Wales, made her first public appearance Sunday since she announced she had completed chemotherapy and would return to some public duties.
At least two students at Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania have been suspended from the swim team after a report that a racial slur was scratched onto a student's body, officials said.
Body mass index, a long-time tool used to measure a person's health, may soon be out the door as some health professionals push for a system they say is more accurate.
Cole Haas is more than just an avid fan of the F.W. Johnson Wildcats football team. He's a fixture on the sidelines, a source of encouragement, and a beloved member of the team.
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An anonymous business owner paid off the mortgage for a New Brunswick not-for-profit.
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A growing group of brides and wedding photographers from across the province say they have been taken for tens of thousands of dollars by a Barrie, Ont. wedding photographer.
Paleontologists from the Royal B.C. Museum have uncovered "a trove of extraordinary fossils" high in the mountains of northern B.C., the museum announced Thursday.
The search for a missing ancient 28-year-old chocolate donkey ended with a tragic discovery Wednesday.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is celebrating an important milestone in the organization's history: 50 years since the first women joined the force.
It's been a whirlwind of joyful events for a northern Ontario couple who just welcomed a baby into their family and won the $70 million Lotto Max jackpot last month.