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Websense TRITON Defensio Social Web Security for Facebook review

The days when Facebook was nothing more than fun way to waste time with a few friends are long gone. Today, you're just as likely to run across prospective employers there as you are old classmates, and that's to say nothing of the scammers and spammers you might find, too.

Keeping your Facebook profile and pages polished and professional looking enough for all comers can be a chore, and keeping them free of spam and scams can be downright impossible. Enter Websense's TRITON Defensio Social Web Security for Facebook.

Available as a Facebook app (free for personal use), Defensio is designed to keep your Facebook pages free of unwanted and potentially harmful content. It's easy enough to use, but is somewhat hamstrung by Facebook's limiting APIs.

You can activate Defensio by clicking its Facebook page and granting it permission to access your Facebook account. You can have it protect personal Facebook profiles or Facebook pages (such as those set up for a business or other activity) from profanity, spam and potentially malicious content, such as viruses and phishing scams.

The problem is that Defensio's ability to protect a personal profile is limited by Facebook's API, which does not allow third party apps to remove content from a user's profile: The user must delete the content him or herself. That means that every bit of risky content and profanity, from relatively mild swears like "hell" to more offensive curses, like the f word, appears on your profile.

Defensio simply alerts you (at an email address you supply) that suspect content, such as "possible profanity" has been posted. Unfortunately, Defensio's email alerts (which you can turn off) always arrived a few minutes after the Facebook message telling me that a friend had posted on my wall. Because I had Facebook's own alerts enabled, that meant Defensio's alerts were only telling me what I already knew.

Another issue: Defensio's default profanity feature isn't enabled by, well, default. I had to turn it on manually. Before I did so, the app didn't alert me to any profanity at all. Once the default feature was enabled, the app proved fairly adept at picking up suspect profanity, catching most of the swears sent my way, with no false positives.

Unfortunately, though, it missed several posts, including some with the same curse words it had previously identified. Results with porn links were similarly mixed: It failed to notify me of one link to a porn site that had been posted to my wall, even though the link's description contained the phrase "naked girls." It did, however, flag a posted link to a more well known porn site with a more obvious name.

When Defensio does catch posts containing suspected profanity, spam or malicious content, they're listed in its "Comment Moderation" section. You're given two options: "Delete" or "Not Spam." Opting for "Not Spam" simply removes the comment from Defensio's list. And while you might think that selecting "Delete" would delete the post, you'd be wrong. Instead, it generates a popup message telling you that due to Facebook limitations, you must manually delete the post.

Defensio's approach would make sense if the Comment Moderation section acted as a queue for holding suspect posts, which you could then delete or approve for posting. I understand that the app is hamstrung by some of Facebook's rules, which is unfortunate. But its limitations would be less frustrating if the software's interface made them clearer.



Comments

Cmercier said: You missed some big and important points For one thing Defensio can protect Facebook users from malicious links not just profanity These are links in innocent-looking posts that infect your system with malware when you click on them You wont know they are malicious until you click on themand then its too late According to Websense research 40 of Facebook updates have links and 10 of those links are either malicious or spam Second you can only keep your profile free of profanity on your own if you maintain constant vigilance something that gets harder to do as your volume increases Just as it would be a fools errand to manage email spam on your own it is similarly ridiculous to expect you to moderate your Facebook content without some automated help By the way profanity filtering is disabled by default on personal profiles because we received way too many complaints seems a lot of Facebook users dont mind the profanity but it is enabled by default on pages which are much more commonly used by companies

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