Do you remember the catchy song, "United Breaks Guitars"? Did United Airlines forgot about that incident from 2008 that was made into a song in 2009 by a customer whose guitar was broken while he flew with them? The video has been seen more than 14 million times in the past 5 years.
The latest social media incident to hit United Airlines is a photo of a dog sitting on the tarmac in the Houston, Texas airport while it is raining. While the angle of the photo makes it hard to discern how wet the dog was getting, the optics don't look good. The initial Tweet about the incident was ret-tweeted more than fifteen hundred times and then re-tweeted by countless others. In addition, news organizations around the world such as The Daily Mail, and The New York Daily News, The New York Post, etc... picked up the story and wrote about it.
The bottom line is that companies large and small must realize that one wrong move can create a major negative pubic relations event. Will this harm United's bottom line? Most likely not since the entire industry is seeing record profits, and now that oil prices are falling airline profits are soaring ever higher.
While this social media incident may not hurt United Airline's financially, due to current market conditions, it has become part and parcel of its history the next time a social media incident occurs. Therefore, it is imperative to ensure that employees are trained in how to properly deal with social media incidents.
Copyright 2014 by Shear Law, LLC All rights reserved.
To inform about the legal, business, privacy, cyber security, and public policy issues that confront those who utilize digital platforms.
Tuesday, December 30, 2014
California's New Digital "Eraser Button" Law
On January 1, 2015, California's SB 568 Privacy Rights For California's Minors in The Digital World goes into effect. The bill was signed in September 2013 and gave website operators a little more than a year to ensure that they have the ability to comply with the new law.
In general, SB 568, seeks to protect minors by generally prohibiting operators of digital platforms (such as web sites, online services, online applications, mobile apps, etc...) from knowingly marketing and advertising to a minor a broad range of products specified in the law. Some of these products may include alcoholic beverages, firearms, ammunition, tobacco products, fireworks, lottery tickets, tattoos, drug paraphernalia. The new law requires operators of digital platforms to notify minors of their rights to remove content or information they posted and honor their requests to remove such data, subject to specified conditions and exceptions.
At first glance, this new law doesn't appear to have much teeth. For example, the law doesn't appear to have an enforcement mechanism and it is silent about a private right of action against those who may violate the law. Therefore, when this new law is allegedly violated how does one go about rectifying the situation?
While SB 568 may help protect California minors from some digital mistakes that may harm their ability to gain acceptance into the college of their dreams, it should not replace educating our children about the digital issues that they confront every day.
Copyright 2014 by Shear Law, LLC All rights reserved.
In general, SB 568, seeks to protect minors by generally prohibiting operators of digital platforms (such as web sites, online services, online applications, mobile apps, etc...) from knowingly marketing and advertising to a minor a broad range of products specified in the law. Some of these products may include alcoholic beverages, firearms, ammunition, tobacco products, fireworks, lottery tickets, tattoos, drug paraphernalia. The new law requires operators of digital platforms to notify minors of their rights to remove content or information they posted and honor their requests to remove such data, subject to specified conditions and exceptions.
At first glance, this new law doesn't appear to have much teeth. For example, the law doesn't appear to have an enforcement mechanism and it is silent about a private right of action against those who may violate the law. Therefore, when this new law is allegedly violated how does one go about rectifying the situation?
While SB 568 may help protect California minors from some digital mistakes that may harm their ability to gain acceptance into the college of their dreams, it should not replace educating our children about the digital issues that they confront every day.
Copyright 2014 by Shear Law, LLC All rights reserved.
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