ElementumSpa says they found his Facebook and LinkedIn with that information.Appears to be a cell phone number so no address tied to it. No last name posted either. Just street name. Besides Gary and Cupids, who else will be privy to his hobbying habit?
I suppose if he is a client of other places they may have his full name and full address just like Cupids does.ElementumSpa says they found his Facebook and LinkedIn with that information.
Thats what im saying... assuming shes telling the truth.I think it's great - consequences for an unforgivable act. My only issue is there's the small chance that a lady is lying and accuses a guy to get revenge. But I don't see this happening too often if ever.
+100Wow. That’s fucked.
Both acts are inexcusable
No kidding both sides are idiots.+100
I'd never stealth but I'm not booking with cupids anytime soon either
Exactly, what's next as the line shifts? A misunderstanding and client is outed on twitter. There is a tweet of a lawyer explaining the legality of releasing someone's private information and the agency is possibly liable for doing so.+100
I'd never stealth but I'm not booking with cupids anytime soon either
No kidding.I’m conflicted about how this particular incident was handled, but a bigger issue that worries me is that there seems to be a kind of bubble chamber culture developing on Twitter where some SPs are more open to posting client information than they used to be.
For example, a few months ago, a reasonably well-known Ottawa independent SP posted a client’s real name and phone number to Twitter just because he had been a no-show two times in a row. I get it, she was angry, but she also could have destroyed this man’s career.
Once this kind of culture starts developing, screening is going to get harder because everyone is going to be paranoid about being outed. And it undermines trust in general... if this kind of info sometimes gets tossed around on Twitter, it makes the mind wonder what kind of information about clients is being tossed around between SPs in slightly less public forums, like private multi-person chat services, where info could easily be leaked by any disgruntled participant.
Good point.I’m conflicted about how this particular incident was handled, but a bigger issue that worries me is that there seems to be a kind of bubble chamber culture developing on Twitter where some SPs are more open to posting client information than they used to be.
For example, a few months ago, a reasonably well-known Ottawa independent SP posted a client’s real name and phone number to Twitter just because he had been a no-show two times in a row. I get it, she was angry, but she also could have destroyed this man’s career.
Once this kind of culture starts developing, screening is going to get harder because everyone is going to be paranoid about being outed. And it undermines trust in general... if this kind of info sometimes gets tossed around on Twitter, it makes the mind wonder what kind of information about clients is being tossed around between SPs in slightly less public forums, like private multi-person chat services, where info could easily be leaked by any disgruntled participant.