Thursday, August 21, 2008
Facebook Monitoring
I think that Facebook and other similar social networking sites should be able to be monitored by sports coaches, teachers, and administrators and consequences should be given to those who are not representing the schools the correct way. People who put things that are inappropriate not only for school, but anytime, should not be able to go on with their lives as if they never did anything and be let off the hook because it was on a social networking site that is “private.” If someone says something racially discriminatory or posts an explicit or inappropriate picture, there should be consequences because in most cases, the name of the school that the person is attending is on the site, and this can lead to the school being branded with a scarlet letter of bad students or being racially or ethnically or even sexual-orientation-ally (?) discriminatory. The entire school could have to take the blame for something that one person does on a website that could be accessed by almost anyone in the world rather easily. If a person uploads a picture of himself or herself smoking, drinking, doing drugs, or other material deemed inappropriate, the school’s administrators or sports teams’ senior leaders should be allowed to monitor their account because their actions can not only affect the person’s life, but also the entire school’s donated funds, student population, and even state status. Such illegal activities could in real life lead to the arrest of the person and should not be taken lightly just because he or she was not caught in the action of doing these inappropriate things, only viewed in a picture or wall post. People could be put in jail or prison if they were actually seen doing these things, and for such substantial offences they cannot be trusted not to do it again. If the person who uploaded the picture or posted something harassing was on a sports team, they should be removed from the sports team or suspended from several games. I can see how people would think that Facebook is a private place where people cannot see unless given access, but the fact is, it isn’t. It is a very public place, where any hacker could see anything and where every picture you post is put on the news feed. These people do not realize that what they do on a social network can and most likely will affect other people, their school, and their own lives. The person should also have a suspension from school for a few days and their actions on such sites should be monitored more than those of others. It isn’t a matter of being able to have privacy as much as one of being cruel or discriminatory towards others or even doing things that hurt one’s own self. It can hurt more than just one person, as the harassed person’s friends, parents, and loved ones can be offended from someone’s hurtful posts. These are a few of my reasons that schools should be able to monitor Facebook accounts.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Hey, Tarik! Very well-written post. As a teacher, I'm conflicted because I really believe in privacy rights and protecting people's privacy, but there is certainly something to be said about someone's behavior online as it relates to the school or its sports teams.
I guess I get worried about who makes the decision that something is inappropriate?
Post a Comment