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i think facebook is getting too popular (pg. 3)
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Invasionmix
It would be even more messed if your mom poked you lol :D
exstasie
quote:
Originally posted by electro funk
so funny lisa...look what i put on her wall

"my mom is on facebook? weird ahahahah. see you soon mom...no spying on me please ahahahahah...love you"


do you think it would be weird if i added your mom? :eek:

haha...too funny
jchung52
quote:
Originally posted by smuncky
i just found out today that one of my profs has facebook :nervous:


many employers have begun to use facebook to check on employees ( such as mine, all my managers have facebook so ive limited them). you have to be careful about posting/what groups you join cuz you may be called up on it. for example, i was in the i love CZ group. a few days later, i had a few anti-drug/anti-club/anti-rave friends ask me if i was doing drugs cuz they checked out the group and realized what it was. gotta be careful if you dont want to get ed/stereotyped unless of course u dont care
Cribby
quote:
Originally posted by trance-ultima
even funnier if your GRANDMA added you to facebook :nervous:

HHAHAHAHAHA
imagine that one :eek:


My grandmother is on facebook...Knox :)
exstasie
quote:
Originally posted by jchung52
many employers have begun to use facebook to check on employees ( such as mine, all my managers have facebook so ive limited them). you have to be careful about posting/what groups you join cuz you may be called up on it. for example, i was in the i love CZ group. a few days later, i had a few anti-drug/anti-club/anti-rave friends ask me if i was doing drugs cuz they checked out the group and realized what it was. gotta be careful if you dont want to get ed/stereotyped unless of course u dont care


a lot of companies use it as well to monitor if someone is using work time for their own personal time.

With the added mini feed and time display, its not very difficult is someone hasn't limited their profile to figure who's slacking in the office and who's not.
PurpleHaze
quote:
Originally posted by Invasionmix
It would be even more messed if your mom poked you lol :D


AHHAHAHA poke wars with your mom FTW!!!
trance-ultima
quote:
Originally posted by PurpleHaze
AHHAHAHA poke wars with your mom FTW!!!


OMG LMFAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
too funnny

hope yo mama dosent tag you in some possibly embarassing pics from your childhood hahahha
PurpleHaze
quote:
Originally posted by trance-ultima
OMG LMFAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
too funnny

hope yo mama dosent tag you in some possibly embarassing pics from your childhood hahahha


LOL LOL imagine she scans pics of him when he was a baby getting a bath "awwwwwwww look how small his pee pee is"

classic europoean mothers!!
trance-ultima
quote:
Originally posted by PurpleHaze
LOL LOL imagine she scans pics of him when he was a baby getting a bath "awwwwwwww look how small his pee pee is"

classic europoean mothers!!

thats so true
i think every european kid has naked baby pics and pics in the bath
what is up with that?
llmaonever quite got it
but its cute :)


i wanna see some naked baby ones of u *wink wink*
ahahahah u cutie pie
:)
Misanthrope
gawd i love racial stereotypes!

dallastar
here's an article I just read in the newspaper
quote:
TECHNOPHILE
TheStar.com - Life - I use it to spy
I use it to spy
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Apr 03, 2007 04:30 AM
Jen Gerson

I found him on Facebook.

He's chubby now, sports a cubic zirconia in one ear and a thin beard trimmed tight around the jaw. For religious views, he writes: "SMOKE WEED EVERY DAY." Favourite books: "hahahahahahahahahaha. Who has time to read?" He says he's an exotic dancer at Chip & Dales where he works "as eye candy for money."

This is the guy who tormented me in high school.

He called me a dork. He reminded me daily of how few people liked me. He accused me of being a lesbian in biology class.

His Facebook profile has become a source of constant comfort. Whenever I feel disliked or dorky, I look at his page. His lack of success in life fills me with petty glee.

Unlike others in Generation Y, I use Facebook for more nefarious purposes than just keeping track of my acquaintances or inviting people to parties or sharing photos. I am a shameless snoop. I use it to spy and I'm not afraid to admit it.

Myspace, Facebook and now services such as Twitter are reconnecting us with every person we've met since childhood. I know where the person I hate most is working. I know who my Grade 4 choir rival is dating. I know that a high school friend with a baby is addicted to eBay.

I've looked up all of my exes.

Facebook claims more than 430,000 members in Toronto – a number that, following a Gladwellian Tipping Point, has almost doubled in the past month – it's a trend that's not likely to blow out. The Internet has made it easy to keep up and keep snooping. It's turning us – not just me – into a generation of voyeurs.

Facebook can act as a party planner, and then provide the virtual space to upload evidence of the debauchery. It allows for moment by moment updates with blog-like authority. The amount of detail on a Facebook page can be overwhelming.

"You can be a Facebook stalker," says Spencer Vaudry, 18. "It gets ridiculous."

Of course, the impulse to spy would be nothing without a cadre of bloggers, bookers and exhibitionists ready to sate the demand.

One of these is Justin Kan, 23. The San Franciscan attached a video camera to his head almost two weeks ago and has broadcast the minutia of his life in real time on Justin.tv. Initially he included his cellphone number so fans could call him, but eventually had to remove it.

"My cellphone has physically exploded because of call volume."

Kan also dealt with pranksters who called 9-1-1 on him, bringing armed officers into his home – one of the more dramatic moments of an Internet phenom that includes more mundane moments; such as Kan eating, Kan sleeping, Kan using the bathroom ...

"Why am I doing this? Because it's a lot of fun," he says. "I get to show people what it's like to live the life of Justin Kan. And people have liked it and that's a pretty good feeling."

Five hundred people watch Kan sleep.

Feeding the Internet the details of our lives is addictive. It makes every party we go to, every fight, every insight feel like they are worth publishing. It makes our lives seem grand and theatrical.

Break-ups between friends and lovers are no longer just gossip, they are sent via RSS feed to the inboxes of our followers, also known as friends.

I don't think any of us can make a clear distinction between the private and public spheres of our lives anymore. Is it okay to upload drunken photos of ourselves on the Internet if the album is private? Can we blog about our jobs if our Livejournal doesn't attach our name?

We understand anonymity and permissions and privacy settings, but know nothing about discretion.

Pundits have been warning us for years that these indiscretions will come back to haunt us; that our drunken rampages and open drug use will keep us from finding jobs; that our advertised one-night stands will scare away potential mates.

I'm less worried about this than I am about a generation that thinks nothing about putting video cameras on every street corner. I'm worried that we're making ourselves vulnerable to government and corporations who will use our indiscretion to quietly wrest our privacy from us.

Facebook makes me worried about a world in which no one needs to watch us, because we're all watching one another.


SOURCE
Jeff Button
i'm on there now, but still don't have pics up.

lol
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