The whole Facebook discussion is absolutely fascinating. I love how this list thinks! I was interviewed by our campus paper about it yesterday and among many of the ideas already presented here I also expressed the importance of "personal brand" management that today's die-hard internet user needs to become acclimated to. I think what we're seeing with the Facebook backlash is more about a maturation of personal data management than a problem with "stalkerish" behavior. Digital social networks are rather new in the big picture and it takes time for communities to acclimate to any such tool. Sometimes it takes a shift like this one to make users more reflective and critical of their use and that's never a bad thing in my book. I also think it's truly fascinating that the protesters are using Facebook itself as a tool to organize. There must be a sense of commitment to the technology there that I haven't quite wrapped my brain around yet. It's also important to see this reactionary behavior in a bigger sense. Unlike an offline protest that would actually require folks to get out into the street and organize, participating in an online revolt is often a click,type,click level of participation. I could sign about a dozen online petitions in ten minutes. How dedicated can I really be to the cause if this is all the effort I have to put in to take part? Sarah "Intellagirl" Robbins Ball State University, Muncie IN On 9/7/06, 'Gail Taylor <gdtaylor@uiuc.edu> wrote:
I have a Facebook account. The feeds are being sent to others who are designated as being a 'friend', as opposed to everyone who might be a member of a larger user group (i.e., University of Illinois). Individual users control this designation by choosing to accept or decline an invitation to be someone's friend. What's interesting is that the people who seem to be joining the protest groups are those who have a large number of friends (200-plus), and also those who might have accepted invitations to be friends when the other person was an acquaintance of sorts.
The number of friends one has is a status symbol for some students with Facebook accounts. This information has come out in conversations with undergrad students here on campus who have accounts. I get invitations to be friends with others here at the university who do not know me, but have heard about me from one of their friends, teachers, or other connections here on campus. It also appears this practice is one that is feeding feelings related to Facebook invading a person's privacy, as opposed to reconizing this software has been enabling this process all along through search and hyperlink functions.
/Gail
***************************** Gail D. Taylor, M.Ed. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Human Resource Education Ph.D. Student Educational Psychology Teaching Assistant
"We can't just have mainstream behavior on television in a free society. We have to make sure we see the whole panorama of human behavior." -- Jerry Springer _______________________________________________ The air-l@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
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-- Sarah "Intellagirl" Robbins http://www.intellagirl.com http://secondlife.intellagirl.com Yahoo: Intellagirl Skype: Intellagirl SecondLife: Intellagirl Tully