Social Network Status Updates Come Back To Bite You

from the is-nothing-private? dept

Lots of people wrestle with the question of what in their lives is public or private, particularly as they put more of them online. But it may pay to err on the side of caution, as plenty of instances continue to pop up to remind us that really, very little, if anything is private once it’s online. Take the case of a Philadelphia Eagles stadium worker, apparently fired after he called the team “retarded” in a status update, for letting a player sign with another team. Or the New York City cop, whose update that he was watching the movie Training Day — which features Denzel Washington as a cop who doesn’t play by the rules — in order “to brush up on proper police procedure” helped a suspect beat a gun-possession charge. Part of the issue is that as people get more and more friends online, even stuff they think is private essentially becomes public. That will undoubtedly have an effect on people’s online behavior, and could hamper the growth of social networking and online life-sharing.

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Comments on “Social Network Status Updates Come Back To Bite You”

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19 Comments
Doc Rings says:

It’s pretty easy: mean what you say and say what you mean. If you can’t live honestly, then maybe you should refrain. People need to get away from leading double lives…

If you have ideas that make you a bad cop, then be honest and don’t be a cop.

If you think something is retarded and you want to talk about it online, then at least have the cajones to take the punishment…

If you mean something sarcastic, that’s what emoticons are for! 😉

Medbob says:

It's just another data point

The real point here is that this is another place where truth can leak out. If you’ve got a real bad attitude in your “professional” life, (and I use that term loosely here) it may show. Certainly if you cannot identify the problem as it moves from your mind to the keyboard, then it’s systemic, and you need a reboot or an enema!
It takes a bit of common sense, something that is becoming increasingly less common.

chris (profile) says:

facebook should be illegal

i set my status to “boffing my secretary, susan” and my wife left me and is suing me for alimony and custody of the kids, susan’s husband left her and is suing her for divorce, susan left me and is suing me for defamation, and is also suing the company for sexual harrassment, and the company has fired me for no good damn reason.

facebook is a freakin menace and should be burned to the ground.

Michael Talpas (profile) says:

Re: facebook should be illegal

Well, if you weren’t boffing susan, then she can sue you for defamation. However, if you were boffing her, I don’t see how the suit could stick, as you were simply telling the truth, and you didn’t mention anything concerning her character.

As to her suing the company, we don’t know the details. Were you the only businessman boffing her? Was she threatened by you or others if she didn’t boff you? Etc.

And yes, I know you were being sarcastic. I just thought it would be amusing to respond as though you were being truthful.

Rekrul says:

I don’t even have a “social networking” page. I never saw the need to put aspects of my life up on a public page and then add “friends”. The only reason I even created a YouTube account was so that I could bypass the age restriction on some videos. I keep getting offers to be put on friends lists from other users and I just ignore them. My profile is empty.

Michael Talpas (profile) says:

Is that necessarily bad?

“That will undoubtedly have an effect on people’s online behavior, and could hamper the growth of social networking and online life-sharing.”

I am not sure this is necessarily bad. It isn’t good, but it isn’t bad, either. It is simply a fact of sharing your life online. If people realize that sharing their entire life online is going to take away their privacy, and they value their privacy, they are going to stop sharing their entire life online. It is a choice that people just haven’t been thinking about till now. Hopefully, this will lead to more thoughtful business models for social sites in the future.

I don’t know what those might be (I’m not in the business) but I am sure more intelligent people then I will figure it out.

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