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Banter Technology

Our acceptance of social photos

Only a few years ago, we would hold our personal photographs of holidays in an album in our homes.  They would only come out when our nearest and dearest visited us and we’d show them where we’ve been, what we saw and what our accommodation looked like.

Photos from birthday parties or weddings may be shared a little more by email, or by providing physical copies to those that were also there.

Would we dream about making those same, very personal photos available to other friends who perhaps would otherwise never get to see our photos, friends from yesteryear or acquaintances?

These days, it seems the answer is yes.  With Facebook, Google+ and others, its almost our first thought when we download our digital photos from our cameras and phones to our computers.  I do it all the time – download to the PC, then upload a selection (based on how I look in them) to Facebook.  I mean my privacy settings are quite tight, but even then there would be more than 100 people who would see my new photos on their Facebook news feed.

Strange how things change so fast and how things that weren’t even considered before suddenly become the ‘done’ thing.

 

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Banter Technology

A surprising social media recluse

I have written about this before but yesterday, I met another girl who just refuses to sign up to Facebook or any other social media tool.  Some of her friends are even on it and she does know what its about from a third-hand perspective.

Perhaps more intriguing is what she does use to keep in touch with friends as she is quite inseparable from her laptop back home – MSN Messenger.  Yep that’s right that old early noughties tool.  The closest I come to MSN Messenger these days is when I log into my old Hotmail account every now and then and automatically get signed in to the web-version!

The title of this post is “a surprising social media recluse” – the keyword in bold there.

It is surprising because this person is my 16-year old cousin.  She is the youngest person I have met who doesn’t either get it or purposely refuses to sign up.  I tried my best to convince her but to no avail.  My reasons are somewhat selfish because as a family they emigrated to New Zealand about six years ago and it would be far easier to stay in touch with tools like Facebook.

But alas, what will be will be.

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Banter Friends

Why some people shy away from social media?

In my friends circle, it always amazes me how one group have fully embraced social media but in another, it has been almost completely and deliberately been ignored.

The reasons given are usually two-fold:

  • I don’t feel comfortable sharing personal information with everyone.
  • I know who my friends are.  I can speak to them on the phone or go and see them.  Why do I need to go to Facebook to talk to them.  That’s quite sad.

I don’t know if its because of what I do or what my background is, but I just don’t understand this attitude.  Sure, Facebook aren’t exactly whiter than white when it comes to privacy but they have had to cave in to user demands and the huge public outcry when Facebook’s opt-out default settings were brought to light.  The options now available on Facebook’s settings pages are in-depth and quite comprehensive in my opinion, though to less versed people they may still appear somewhat confusing.

In any case, I believe much of this privacy stuff is sorted though the privacy groups and any other interested parties should still keep a close watch on Facebook as they hold so much of our information.

You can now control exactly who sees what on Facebook.  If you don’t want certain people to see status updates or any of them, you can do that.  If you want some of your photos only visible to certain people, you can do that too.  If you don’t want to put up photos of your new baby, fair enough as this is more about superstition than privacy really and I kind of get this.  But otherwise, this couldn’t be an opinion/attitude I agree less with.  Its not even old-fashioned really, especially since this is the generation that the Internet has developed with.  I think it is part ignorance and part stubbornness.

For me its a missed opportunity too.  We’re at the age where most of us are married and about to or have already started families.  This is the moment where you start losing touch with old friends even more than before.  Opportunities to meet reduce further and you have truck loads to catch up on when you do meet.  In today’s world, keeping in touch couldn’t be easier even with our ever busier lives.  The ideal way to keep in touch now with everyone is to see/read/hear snippets of what people are doing, thinking, going, gone.  Guess what?  Tools like Facebook, Twitter and Memfy allow just that so I do feel that its a shame that some of my close friends don’t take advantage.  I know they’ll be there if I really need them, but would rather not have to wait for those exceptional times to catch up.

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