We live in a new world where personal information is shared faster, and in higher quantity, than ever before. I'm more guilty than most.
I was out with friends last night, and remarked that there weren't many embarrassing pictures of me in college because it was still the age of film, where each picture cost money. Before digital cameras were cheap and available, you had to really go out of your way to take embarrassing pictures. Not anymore.
I have relatives and friends going through college now, and the sheer number of embarrassing pictures I see is overwhelming. It reflect the reduced cost of taking pictures, and the ease of sharing our lives.
They then post those pictures to their Facebook profiles, put them on their blogs, share them on MySpace, post videos to YouTube, and tweet them to random people around the world using Twitter. Esteemed colleagues do the same. They say it helps them add character on the web, and they like to share their lives with friends. But sometimes, being too open can get you in trouble.
It's exciting, it connects us, and it's also very dangerous, and pictures aren't the only problem!
Think about your existing blog rantings in the context of applying for a CEO position, or running for public office, 20-30 years from now. Chances are, if you inventory your publicly accessible social networking and blog information today, you wouldn't even make it to city council or head of the PTA!
Go ahead, Google yourself right now, I'll wait. What did you find?
Am I saying that you are a bad person? No, but fact is, we are sharing the most intimate details of our lives to thousands of strangers, but not always thinking about the consequences. Especially young professionals and people still in high-school and college. Our parents did all of the same things we do, but they didn't make an underground newspaper about it and pass it to their friends. That is in essence what we are doing.
Pictures that seem funny now, might haunt you the rest of your life. Blog posts where you fly off the handle and stream expletives about that, "$%^&* guy that ^&U*I cut you off was a stupid &#$%^", very well might cost you a lot in the long run. Drunk-dail Twitters about your latest one-night stands are NOT such a good idea.
Here's a few tips to keep your public profile PG-13 while still having fun.
- If you are prone to using a lot of language, make sure your public streams are available only to those that know you and can take it in context. Lock your profiles down so that only friends can access what you are writing.
- Keep any public pictures on your blog or social networks as clean as possible. No nudity or lewd poses. Post all the good stuff in your private by-invite only profile.
- Share your private by-invite profile with only those that you trust completely. Over 20-30 years, relationships change, and you would be very surprised by who might turn against you in the long run.
- Use an untraceable alias when making comments on the internet, one that can't be traced back to you. Unless you carefully think about everything you post, anything you say can and will be held against you.
- Think about how anything you write publicly might sound if read in the court of law, or by an angry newscaster.
- Maintain a countering public profile that your professional network can access. It can contain some character, but not too much.
- Remember that even if you delete something, Google is forever. There might be archives accessible of your blog or pages available for the rest of your life, and much longer.
So my suggestion to you is to be careful about what you are posting for others to read. It might just come back and haunt you.
Many people forget that at 13-30 years old we are all pretty angry and say things we don't mean in the long run. It used to be locking yourself in your room and blasting the music, or sneaking out at night to dance in an abandoned barn in the country.
So instead of that angry blog, have you tried cigarettes, drinking, and dance?
1 comments:
That is really true, and it is a pain trying to go delete your web record.On the other hand I guess you can build up a good reputation online that can help u be a CEO or PTA leader :) in the future.
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