November 2007

Wall Street Journal: Just How Much Do We Want To Share On Social Networks

Vauhini Vara of the Wall Street Journal asks: Just How Much Do We Want To Share On Social Networks ?

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119621309736406034.html

Facebook users share for a reason. We want others to know what we’re up to. We trade privacy for increased connectedness. But we want to do it on our own terms. This isn’t about the information Beacon collects, but how it collects it — peeking in on us, then asking to report to our friends what it saw.

Beacon asks Facebook users to make ever more-invasive trades for the sake of an ever more-superficial sense of closeness. It may or may not be worth it, but keep in mind: One definition for “beacon” is warning signal.

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Cory Doctorow: How Your Creepy Ex-Co-Workers Will Kill Facebook

Cory Doctorow (BoingBoing) weaves in Information Week a cautionary tale about Facebook usage.

http://informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=204203573

Cory’s thesis is straightforward - as more people join Facebook, it becomes less desirable as you’re forced to ‘friend’ or ’snub’ random people from your past.

In the real world, we don’t articulate our social networks. Imagine how creepy it would be to wander into a co-worker’s cubicle and discover the wall covered with tiny photos of everyone in the office, ranked by “friend” and “foe,” with the top eight friends elevated to a small shrine decorated with Post-It roses and hearts

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A 20-Something guy coming to terms with himself debates coming out on Facebook

An interesting read that was recently fowarded our way:

http://figuringmyselfoutblog.blogspot.com/2007/10/facebook-factor.html

The entire article is worth reading, but this is a very importing line:

I would love to say I will soon be coming out on Facebook. It would be a quick, easy, and relatively painless way to let people know. However, there are several reasons why I’m not:

1) The employer factor—they DO check Facebook, and it’s none of their business.
2) Family-Facebook friends include my sister and cousins…not ready to “go there” with them.
3) It’s impersonal
4) Perhaps most important-is it really the business of every one of my 400 some friends, and thousands of people in my school and regional networks to know if I’m gay or straight?

These four factors alone lead me to conclude that I will not be outing myself via Facebook anytime soon.

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Some Random Links to

What happens when a person’s social and professional life clashes online? A firing.

Facebook
http://www.tradersnarrative.com/facebook-addicted-goldman-sachs-trader-is-fired-769.html
http://www.thedelphian.com/06-11/1282
http://internetducttape.com/2007/01/18/ottawa-employees-fired-because-of-facebook/
http://daily.stanford.edu/article/2006/1/24/facebookNotForEmployers
http://media.www.thebatt.com/media/storage/paper657/news/2006/06/28/Opinion/Fired.For.Facebook-2118962.shtml
MySpace
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,276592,00.html
http://www.wesh.com/news/9400560/detail.html
http://www.local6.com/education/10838194/detail.html
Blog
http://money.cnn.com/2005/02/14/news/economy/blogging/
http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/Careers/04/05/blogging/
http://www.news.com/I-was-fired-for-blogging/2010-1030_3-5490836.html
http://www.bloggersblog.com/cgi-bin/bloggersblog.pl?bblog=926071
http://www.usatoday.com/money/workplace/2005-06-14-worker-blogs-usat_x.htm

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A 20-Something guy coming to terms with himself debates coming out on Facebook

An interesting read that was recently fowarded our way:

http://figuringmyselfoutblog.blogspot.com/2007/10/facebook-factor.html

The entire article is worth reading, but this is a very importing line:

I would love to say I will soon be coming out on Facebook. It would be a quick, easy, and relatively painless way to let people know. However, there are several reasons why I’m not:

1) The employer factor—they DO check Facebook, and it’s none of their business.
2) Family-Facebook friends include my sister and cousins…not ready to “go there” with them.
3) It’s impersonal
4) Perhaps most important-is it really the business of every one of my 400 some friends, and thousands of people in my school and regional networks to know if I’m gay or straight?

These four factors alone lead me to conclude that I will not be outing myself via Facebook anytime soon.

Be Careful What You Post Online

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A brilliant intern calls in sick to go to a Halloweed Party- then his boss sees pictures on Facebook.

Valleywag broke the story, with pictures and email copies:
http://valleywag.com/tech/your-privacy-is-an-illusion/bank-intern-busted-by-facebook-321802.php

CNN Covered it, with these word of wisdom “You gotta be careful what you put on personal profiles on sites like Facebook, MySpace… You never know who’s looking”
http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/tech/2007/11/14/seg.facebook.spying.cnn

Be Careful What You Post Online
Updates + Bug Fixes

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