I guess I should introduce myself. I’m Lee Scott and besides occasionally contributing a cartoon or story here from time to time, I’m also the current webmeister for thethreewisemonkeys.com. Being associated with the Three Wise Monkeys feels sort of akin to what it must have felt like being in on the ground floor of Rolling Stone, but don’t be fooled! It’s not all rock and roll. More usually it’s pulling your hair out because you can’t iron out the damned CSS. (Pro-tip: sometimes you just can’t.)
Leveraging social media is a new headache for webmasters. Recently, I listened to a friend of mine complain how he’d lost access to his Facebook account. “Why?” I asked him. Surely there must have been some kind of warning process. “I think it might be because I was sending friend requests to lots of random people and I was constantly trying to promote my music,” he replied. Wait…isn’t that what Facebook is supposed to be about?
I dug deeper. It turns out that there were a few red flags: he was using the
This almost brings us up to date. You see, more recently, Mizaru was lamenting to me that thethreewisemonkeys Facebook account had also been disabled. “Ahh!” I responded with a nod. “I might have some insight about that.” Mizaru was intrigued.
What followed was about an hour’s discussion where I expounded on my interpretation of Facebook’s somewhat esoteric system of user accounts, fan/business pages and groups. We were left scratching our heads and both of us hoped that Facebook would reply to his hastily sent email asking “WTF happened?” (Not in so many words, of course.)
You see, the Three Wise Monkeys has not really leveraged the whole social media scene yet to its full potential. Yes, two thousand Facebook friends were lost (our connection to
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