pantryslut (
pantryslut) wrote2008-06-20 12:16 pm
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I didn't say it, he did.
"The dirty little conceit of so many social-media and -networking sites [...] is that they disguise self-publicity and oversharing as chatting with friends and uploading for storage. By turning private information into public fodder, these sites eliminate the difference between communication and publishing."
(http://nymag.com/news/media/47958/index.html)
And yes, I realize the irony of posting this particular quote on...LiveJournal.
(http://nymag.com/news/media/47958/index.html)
And yes, I realize the irony of posting this particular quote on...LiveJournal.
no subject
Not sure that's a bad thing.
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subcultures, private & public
Seems to me that a lot of Internet tempests are when subcultures collide. Rachel Moss is an example -- an outsider visited a subculture and Did Not Approve. Outsider then complained in another subcultural spot. Two cultures collide and whammo.
On Livejournal I just assume what I say is public unless it's friends-locked. I have a buddy who says he doesn't even trust friends-locked and assumes everything he says is public.
microfame
I don't have any interest in going to a party with the people on the cover of People, but I do have fantasies of being intellectually important.