Aggressive advertising, unwanted friends, and employer-snooping into social networking profiles may dull the edge of being on sites like Facebook and MySpace.
Privacy Backlash Hits Social NetworkingFor every long-lost chum who reaches out to me on Facebook, there's a guy who beat me up on a weekly basis through the whole seventh grade but now wants to be my buddy; or the crazy person who was fun in college but is now kind of sad; or the creepy ex-co-worker who I'd cross the street to avoid but who now wants to know, "Am I your friend?" yes or no, this instant, please.When that happens enough times, someone may just decide it's time to bail out on the social network; either to build a new profile on a different site, or simply ditch it altogether. The world of work poses another challenge for the post-college social networker. American human resources workers will cheerfully dredge up a job applicant's youthful hijinks from such sites and use it to exclude him or her from the hiring process. This is hypocrisy distilled down to its most potent essence. The hiring person, and probably her boss and the boss's boss, etc, wouldn't be able to withstand such scrutiny either in the 21st century, yet they will use it against those who didn't do anything worse than they did. Though there's no hope of US businesses being prevented from doing this, it could change in the UK. The





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