DENVER, CO, January 10, 2013 (Press-News.org) It's been said that a picture is worth a thousand words. When it comes to reputation management, a damaging picture could mean losses in the millions, rather than the thousands. To help reduce the impact a compromising image could have on a person's employment, health and happiness, InternetReputation.com is proud to announce a new image reputation management program.
As Web images have become more pervasive, and image-sharing sites have become more popular in the process, the need for image reputation management has become more apparent, the company claims.
"Anytime a user runs a search on Google, the site will provide a set of images near the top of search results," explains an InternetReputation.com representative. "Obviously, negative images will have an extreme amount of impact, because they're the first thing people will see. However, image-sharing sites of their own can also be damaging simply because they're so popular. According to a recent article on Gawker, Reddit alone has over 3.4 billion page views per month. Flickr and Pintrest have even more."
Image-sharing sites like this allow people to share photographs with one click of the mouse. In this environment, an image could quickly spread like wildfire, and the damage could be tremendous. Comparing two different image problems, spaced years apart, highlights how things have changed in the world of online media.
In 2007, according to news reports, an Oregon mayor posed for racy photographs, and a well-meaning relative shared those photographs online. People printed those photos, they were distributed through the town, and the mayor was recalled weeks later. The images hurt her, but the damage took time. In a modern incident, the son of politician Rand Paul was arrested on suspicion of public intoxication, and mugshots of his arrest hit the web mere hours later, and were copied on multiple forums. The damage of this incident isn't yet known, but the story is playing out in hours instead of weeks, as the politician is already being asked to submit a public statement.
"Images have always been damaging, but in the past, people had a few days or weeks to measure the problem and mount a solid defense. Now, you must respond almost immediately to get in front of a big story," says an InternetReputation.com representative. "That's very hard for individuals to do, but large companies like ours specialize in just this sort of tactical response."
InternetReputation.com can quickly look for damaging photos online, and the company can remove many of those images within hours. The company can then create user image profiles for clients, posting hundreds of photographs that are neutral or positive in nature. Any negative photographs that remain will be drowned out by the wealth of positive information flooding computer screens. All of this work begins minutes after a formal contract is signed. Find out more at www.internetreputation.com.
For more information, please visit www.InternetReputation.com
Contact:
Public Relations Division
InternetReputation.com
Denver Tech Center
4750 South Syracuse 9th Floor
Denver, CO 80237
(800) 751-9178
InternetReputation.com Announces New Image Reputation Management Program
How do you remove embarrassing pictures or images from the Internet? InternetReputation.com announces a new program designed at successfully targeting harmful online images.
2013-01-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Alabama Car Accident Attorney Applauds State's New Insurance Verification System
2013-01-10
Nearly 1 in 4 Alabama motorists do not currently carry any auto liability insurance. To put Alabama's uninsured motorist problem in context, the state ranks 6th in the nation for the highest number of uninsured drivers and 5th for most fatal traffic accidents per capita. When those two statistics are combined, Alabama becomes one of the most dangerous states for drivers.
As with many public safety laws, Alabama's growing dilemma with uninsured motorists stems from a lack of enforcement of its mandatory auto liability insurance law. Although state law requires a motorist ...
AgilQuest Corporation Brings Space Utilization and Office Hoteling Software to iPhone With New Release of OnBoard Workplace Management
2013-01-10
AgilQuest Corporation released a new version of OnBoard, their hoteling and conference room management technology, continuing features and capabilities which increase their lead in the workplace optimization market for large commercial firms and federal government agencies.
"Our customers asked for help shifting their culture from day-at-a-time to hour-by-hour and to support the location-aware phones everyone has, so we are delivering that and more in version 5.5." says Torrance Houlihan, VP of Product Management.
As the leader in hoteling technology for ...
Case Study Examines Prizes for Innovation in Assessment
2013-01-10
Getting Smart released a report on the Automated Student Assessment Prize (ASAP). The case study illustrates a powerful philanthropic use of prizes to drive focused innovation with the goal of promoting deeper learning.
The first two phases of ASAP were sponsored by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to promote focused innovation in student writing assessment.
"ASAP was designed to answer a basic question: Can a computer grade a student-written response on a state-administered test as well as or better than a human grader?" explained co-author Jaison ...
Who and What Drives MBA Rankings? MBA Compass Compares Businessweek, Financial Times, Economist, Forbes, and US News
2013-01-10
MBA Rankings are used to assess the quality of programs and schools. Depending on the publisher, however, rankings follow different methodologies. The platform Master of Business Administration Compass explored internationally recognized full-time MBA rankings from Businessweek, Financial Times, Economist, Forbes, and US News using three dimensions:
Ranking criteria: Which topics are covered by the ranking?
Sources of information: Who provides the information?
Influence: Which groups and topics are given the highest weighting and have greatest impact on the ranking? ...
NASA's Hubble reveals rogue planetary orbit for Fomalhaut B
2013-01-09
Newly released NASA Hubble Space Telescope images of a vast debris disk encircling the nearby star Fomalhaut and a mysterious planet circling it may provide forensic evidence of a titanic planetary disruption in the system.
Astronomers are surprised to find the debris belt is wider than previously known, spanning a section of space from 14 to nearly 20 billion miles from the star. Even more surprisingly, the latest Hubble images have allowed a team of astronomers to calculate the planet follows an unusual elliptical orbit that carries it on a potentially destructive ...
Nursing gerbils unravel benefit of multiple mothers in collective mammals
2013-01-09
In mammals such as rodents that raise their young as a group, infants will nurse from their mother as well as other females, a dynamic known as allosuckling. Ecologists have long hypothesized that allosuckling lets newborns stockpile antibodies to various diseases, but the experimental proof has been lacking until now.
An in-press report in the journal Mammalian Biology found that infant Mongolian gerbils that suckled from females given separate vaccines for two different diseases wound up with antibodies for both illnesses.
The findings not only demonstrate the potential ...
Scientists peer into a brown dwarf, find stormy atmosphere
2013-01-09
A University of Arizona-led team of astronomers for the first time has used NASA's Spitzer and Hubble space telescopes simultaneously to peer into the stormy atmosphere of a brown dwarf, creating the most detailed "weather map" yet for this class of strange, not-quite-star-and-not-quite-planet objects. The forecast shows wind-driven, planet-sized clouds enshrouding these strange worlds.
Brown dwarfs form out of condensing gas like stars but fail to accrue enough mass to ignite the nuclear fusion process necessary to turn them into a star. Instead, they pass their lives ...
Asteroid belt found around Vega
2013-01-09
Vega, the second brightest star in northern night skies, has an asteroid belt much like our sun, discovered by a University of Arizona-lead team of astronomers. A wide gap between the dust belts in nearby bright stars is a strong hint of yet-undiscovered planets orbiting the stars.
The findings from the Infrared Space Telescopes are the first to show an asteroid-like belt ringing Vega. The discovery of an asteroid belt around Vega makes it more similar to its twin, a star called Fomalhaut, than previously known. Both stars now are known to have inner, warm asteroid belts ...
JCI early table of contents for Jan. 9, 2013
2013-01-09
Small peptide ameliorates autoimmune skin blistering disease in mice
Pemphigus vulgaris is a life-threatening autoimmune skin disease that is occurs when the body's immune system generates antibodies that target proteins in the skin known as desomogleins. Desmogleins help to form the adhesive bonds that hold skin cells together and keep the skin intact. Currently, pemphigus vulgaris is treated by long-term immune suppression; however, this can leave the patient susceptible to infection. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Jens Waschke ...
Small peptide ameliorates autoimmune skin blistering disease in mice
2013-01-09
Pemphigus vulgaris is a life-threatening autoimmune skin disease that is occurs when the body's immune system generates antibodies that target proteins in the skin known as desomogleins. Desmogleins help to form the adhesive bonds that hold skin cells together and keep the skin intact. Currently, pemphigus vulgaris is treated by long-term immune suppression; however, this can leave the patient susceptible to infection. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Jens Waschke at the Institute of Anatomy and Cell Biology in Munich, Germany, ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A closer look at biomolecular ‘silly putty’
Oxytocin system of breastfeeding affected in mothers with postnatal depression
Liquid metal-enabled synergetic cooling and charging: a leap forward for electric vehicles
Defensive firearm use is far less common than exposure to gun violence
Lifetime and past-year defensive gun use
Lifetime health effects and cost-effectiveness of tirzepatide and semaglutide in US adults
New members of the CDKL family of genes linked to neurodevelopmental disorders
Advancements in organ preservation: paving the way for better transplantation outcomes
Pitt study makes new insights into the origins of ovarian cancer
Topical steroid withdrawal diagnostic criteria defined by NIH researchers
CeSPIACE: A broad-spectrum peptide inhibitor against variable SARS-CoV-2 spikes
Understanding the origin of magnetic moment enhancement in novel alloys
BU researchers develop computational tools to safeguard privacy without degrading voice-based cognitive markers
Breakthrough in rapid polymer nanostructure production
Artificial photosynthesis: Researchers mimic plants
Social disadvantage can accelerate ageing and increase disease risk
Breaking free from dependence on rare resources! A domestic high-performance permanent magnet emerges!
Symptoms of long-COVID can last up to two years after infection with COVID-19
Violence is forcing women in Northern Ireland into homelessness, finds new report
Latin American intensivists denounce economic and cultural inequities in the global scientific publishing system
Older adults might be more resistant to bird flu infections than children, Penn research finds
Dramatic increase in research funding needed to counter productivity slowdown in farming
How chemistry and force etch mysterious spiral patterns on solid surfaces
Unraveling the mysteries of polycystic kidney disease
Mother’s high-fat diet can cause liver stress in fetus, study shows
Weighing in on a Mars water debate
Researchers ‘seq’ and find a way to make pig retinal cells to advance eye treatments
Re-purposed FDA-approved drug could help treat high-grade glioma
Understanding gamma rays in our universe through StarBurst
Study highlights noninvasive hearing aid
[Press-News.org] InternetReputation.com Announces New Image Reputation Management ProgramHow do you remove embarrassing pictures or images from the Internet? InternetReputation.com announces a new program designed at successfully targeting harmful online images.