growing up online by Carolyn Jabs
We’re Not in Vegas
Anymore What Happens Online Doesn’t Stay Online
Back in the day, people thought they could be anonymous online. Now
everyone knows Internet activity leaves a trail. Some of those
footprints are the unintended byproduct of other activities like
shopping or registering to get access to a website. Other footprints are
deliberate—a mark in the digital sand that says “I was here.”
If there’s a generation gap today, it’s most obvious in how young people
and their parents respond to these intentional footprints.
For teenagers raised on reality TV, it seems perfectly natural and even
necessary to disclose opinions and dreams, where they were last night
and what they looked like when they rolled out of bed this morning.
According to a recent study from the Pew Internet Project, two-thirds of
online teens are “content creators” which means they use videos, photos,
blogs and message boards to divulge the minutiae of their lives.
For anyone over 30, all this self-revelation is TMI (too much
information). At the very least, it’s embarrassing and, at the worst, it
could be compromising.
Value of Privacy
Most adults still believe in the value of privacy, which, at its
simplest, means you get to control what different people know about you.
As countless psychological studies have confirmed, healthy adults edit
their self-presentation depending upon their audience. Think about what,
if anything, you would say about a spat with your spouse to your boss,
best friend, fitness trainer, neighbor or sister.
Most kids make similar distinctions offline, but online they let it all
hang out. Well, not quite all. If surveys are to be believed, many teens
have become relatively savvy about sharing details such as addresses and
phone numbers that might make them vulnerable to predators.
Still, posting something they later regret is becoming a rite of passage
for young people. A growing number of stories confirm that young people
are missing out on scholarships, internships, jobs and even dates
because of something indiscreet they posted online.
Because teens don’t anticipate these problems, some colleges now offer
seminars about how students can use Facebook, MySpace and other social
networking sites to create reputation that won’t make their offline
lives more difficult. Parents can give kids a head start by discussing
these questions.
Who are your friends?
Kids are very casual about adding “friends” to their social networks,
perhaps because a long list makes them feel popular. Talk about how
posting to hundreds of casual friends is like putting the same
information on a bulletin board at school. Some personal details should
only go to people who have proven themselves trustworthy.
Are you using privacy tools?
Facebook, MySpace and other social networking sites offer an assortment
of tools that allow members to screen their profiles from the general
public as well as search engines. They are also introducing filters that
will help members give different levels of access to different kinds of
friends. To be sure your child understands these options, ask him or her
to demonstrate what privacy precautions he or she has taken.
What do you want your reputation to be?
This is a tricky conversation. A teenager may genuinely believe that a
reputation for being “hot” or “crazy” matters more than anything else.
Parents have to remind teens that life is long and they may not always
feel that way.
To bring the point into focus, ask how your teen would feel if you
posted to a website about your sex life before he or she was born or
your drinking habits in college or even the conversations you have with
each other. Remind your teen that he or she wants to get into college,
land a good job, find a responsible spouse and maybe even raise a
family, so it’s important to get into the habit of imagining how a
future employer/spouse/child will feel about what they are posting
today.
Have you searched for yourself?
Yes, this is what adolescents do all day, but online, it’s also
practical advice. When you are on the computer together, put your
child’s name into a search engine and see what pops up. (For
convenience, try using Searchboth.com which shows results from both
Google and Yahoo on the same screen.) Point out to kids that search
engines capture not only what they have posted but also what others have
posted about them.
What can you do about mistakes?
Cleaning up a digital footprint isn’t easy. That’s why there are now
reputation management companies like Reputation Defender
(reputationdefender.com) that help people restore their online
reputations.
Before spending big bucks, try some do-it-yourself tactics like
contacting websites to ask (nicely) that they remove problematic
materials. Other helpful tips for expunging digital missteps can be
found in “Not Just Your Space,” a free e-book written by Tim Dugan, the
young founder of a reputation management company called Naymz.
(www.naymz.com/blog/?p=32).
The point of these questions is not to judge the way teens socialize but
to get them thinking more carefully about the online impression they are
making.
Reputation management will be a lifelong challenge for this generation.
Learning good habits early means they will be less likely to leave
behind footprints they regret and more likely to blaze an online trail
they can be proud of even when they are parents themselves.
Carolyn Jabs can be reached at
crjabs@bex.net.
She recently earned her MA in online ethics and is mother to three
computer-savvy kids. Other Growing Up Online columns are available at
www.growing-up-online.com.
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