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crs6414

Understanding Context Collapse Can Mean a More Fulfilling Online Life | Rewire - 2 views

  • Tech researchers say this is partially the fault of a phenomenon called "context collapse," a sociological concept that describes what happens when many social groups exist in one space.Here's how context collapse plays out online. When you have Facebook friends numbering in the thousands, your audience becomes a little difficult to speak to all at once.In an article for sapiens.org, Sophia Goodman described it as “trying to comfortably chat with your mother, bar buddy, work colleague, and ex-boyfriend at the same time.”In a place where parents, colleagues, bosses and friends all congregate, you can find it difficult to be yourself. Or, rather, to decide which self to be.
  • and your career
    • nroyal18
       
      Link to article about posts that will get you fired
  • Understanding the sociology of social media means you can be more mindful about how you use it. Hopefully, your online life will be more fulfilling because of it. Or, maybe you'll decide to give it up all together.If you do stick around, don’t expect to ever find that “authentic” online version of yourself.“There really isn’t such a thing,” Marwick said. “It’s really always a performance."
    • nroyal18
       
      authentic online personalities don't exist...always a performance
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • There are three basic strategies people have adopted to deal with the reality of posting online.The "lowest common denominator” strategy, or only making posts that you're comfortable with anybody seeing, staying away from anything controversial or overly personal.“Social syphentation,” or migrating your conversation to a place where you have a smaller audience, like a group text, Instagram DMs or Snapchat, where the context and audience are clear.People are also avoiding context collapse by turning to more ephemeral mediums, like Instagram stories and Snapchat. These posts don’t stick around, so you can share without as much worry about the consequences.
    • nroyal18
       
      Lowest common denominator is usually the way I go. Although, I am opening up more within my social media outlets
  • And remember those privacy settings, and use them. Not everyone needs to see every post you make. And if you see something you don't want to see, feel free to mute it.
    • crs6414
       
      Good reminder!
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    I appreciate the explanation in this article about context collapse. It makes sense. This article definitely made me want to go back and check privacy settings and to think more about my likes.
Vanessa

How To Delete Your Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat | WIRED - 7 views

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    Ready to cut the connection? Here's some advice on how to do it.
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    This is so useful, especially after this class. Saved this and will share further.
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    I think it's funny how a lot of these platforms hide this option. Out of all of the web 2.0 platforms, I really enjoy Instagram. That is one I will NOT delete
brucescrews

Vox: How Snapchat's filters work - 1 views

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    I was always curious about how Snapchat's filters are able to identify human faces so well. This video gives a simple explanation of how it works.
crs6414

Pharmacy Students' Perspectives of Social Media Usage in Education - 2 views

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    This article survey's pharmacy students about their use and belief of four tools: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and SnapChat. The questions considered how they viewed privacy and use professionally versus personally.
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