This link has been bookmarked by 36 people . It was first bookmarked on 18 Jan 2008, by Jennifer Maddrell.
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mcollierJust after her honeymoon last March, Wadooah Wali took the de rigueur next step these days: She changed her status on the networking websites Facebook and MySpace from in a relationship to married and posted pictures of her partner another woman.
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Alec CourosAn article describing issues re:social networking and work.
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18 Jan 08
Brian Hsireminds me of the psfk red coat/black coat article....
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paul jonesHoward Rheingold is among the sources for this article about navigating the relationships between online relationships.
Rheingold privacy networking network myspace facebook social SocialNetworking socialnetworks web2.0 article jomc490 ils697
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Will RichardsonBut as a growing number of adults are learning, giving too much information online isn't just a problem for teenagers. On MySpace, Facebook and other social networks, a user can join another member's "friends" list simply by asking. Many people allow new
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Howard RheingoldHoward Rheingold, a blogger and author of books about online communities, recently sent all his Facebook friends a message reminding them that he doesn't actually know everyone on his list.
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Howard Rheingold, a blogger and author of books about online communities, recently sent all his Facebook friends a message reminding them that he doesn't actually know everyone on his list.
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Rather than be selective about whom he accepts as friends, Rheingold and others treat Facebook more as a guestbook, open to nearly everyone who makes a request.
Once you become someone's friend, you can see a list of his or her friends — and ask those people to be your friend, too. So, for example, if you ask Rheingold to become your friend and he agrees, you can send friend requests to all of Rheingold's friends.
They might say yes only because they think you know Rheingold, or that he has referred you to them.
Rheingold warned his friends that they "will find that a large network of people who don't really know me in real life will have some access to information about you.
"If you get friend requests from people who are part of my social graph, please don't assume that they are actually my friends or that I endorse them," Rheingold wrote. "If you are not comfortable with the exposure that being a Facebook friend of mine brings to your profile, 'unfriend' me — I won't feel slighted."
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Madden says.
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"we simply will become more open and transparent about what we share online because the benefits outweigh the risks."
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"People are tracking you all the time," Shlain says. "I always feel like privacy is an illusion."
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