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Ask Slashdot: Living Without Social Media In 2015? 394

An anonymous reader writes On Slashdot, we frequently write derogatory comments regarding social networking sites. We bash Facebook and the privacy implications associated with having a great deal of your life put out there for corporations to monetize. Others advocate for deleting your Facebook profile. Six months ago, I did exactly that. However, as time went on, I have fully realized social media's tacit importance to function in today's world, especially if you are busy advancing your career and making the proper connections to do so. Employers expect a LinkedIn profile that they can check and people you are meeting expect a Facebook account. I have heard that not having an account on the almighty Facebook could label you as a suspicious person. I have had employers express hesitation in hiring me (they used the term "uncomfortable") and graduate school interviewers have asked prying questions regarding some things that would normally be on a person's social media page. Others have literally recoiled in horror at the idea of someone not being on Facebook. I have found it quite difficult to even maintain a proper social life without a social media account to keep up to date with any sort of social activities (even though most of them are admittedly quite mundane). Is living without social media possible in 2015? Does social media have so much momentum that the only course of action is simply to sign up for such services to maintain normality despite the vast privacy issues associated with such sites? Have we forgotten how to function without Facebook?
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Ask Slashdot: Living Without Social Media In 2015?

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  • by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:34PM (#49393035) Homepage

    Just be an old codger like anyone with a 5 digit UID. They don't expect that much of us. If we can handle email then we're doing better than our elected representatives.

    And, if you don't mind, off the lawn.

    • by HornWumpus ( 783565 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:37PM (#49393057)

      Linkedin setup a shadow account for me. Too many people wanted to vouch for my skills.

      • Same here... I ended up filling in a bit of detail on it too, so it's now my online CV. However, I don't use it like a social network, just as a place for people to find my employment info.

        Facebook? Never had an account, never plan to, and never missed it. My social life is already busy enough without it thank you.

        • by the_skywise ( 189793 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @04:02PM (#49393805)

          Agreed - I have no facebook account, no twitter account and I don't do the iggy either... (Simpsons ref) (Don't have a 5 digit UID But I'm old enough that I have to start qualifying my pop culture references coz you young whipper snappers probably weren't even born when the reference was made!) I've got old friends that decry that they can't keep me informed with their lives because I don't have a facebook account. (Hullo, I HAVE a smart phone and you can call or text me... Is that too much of an effort for our relationship?)

          I've got a LinkedIn account that's strictly professional and that's as far as it goes I don't even really communicate on it other than to answer the recruiters or to hook up with some ex-coworkers (which I then take off line). I am amazed at how many people keep sending me personal or political information (all flavors) on it as if employers wouldn't care about that when hiring - The adage is still true - Don't discuss politics, religion or the Great Pumpkin in polite company.

          • by chipschap ( 1444407 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @05:03PM (#49394159)

            I don't have any of that junk either ... but I'm also an old codger who thinks email is modern and up-to-date, and since I play on chess.com I think I'm an advanced internet user :) I don't bother with Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, SnapChat, or any of the others. I sometimes wonder why I bother with /. for that matter.

            But hey, I run Linux and I use Emacs org-mode, so I'm hip, right?

          • It's this simple.

            Anybody who asks me for a Facebook account in the process of hiring isn't worth MY time.
          • by hughbar ( 579555 )
            Bah! You have a smart phone. Actually, so do I but it spends most of its life in the kitchen drawer. Although it was straight purchase, it was/is full of bloatware and I'm waiting to get around to rooting it.

            I don't have Facebook, I'm thinking of giving up on Twitter and I do have LinkedIn for professional presence only. I'm 65 this year and have spent my whole life in tech, my house is full of computers, but I see no need for permanent connection with superficial social transactions.

            News at 8, Facebo
      • by macs4all ( 973270 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:50PM (#49393705)
        I don't do Social Media/Networking at all (and I rarely, if ever, miss it).

        A couple of years ago, my boss sent me a LinkedIn invite. I said "Well, it's my boss; so..." and started to fill-out the application.

        I got to some point, and said "Screw this. I'm not giving up (whatever info it was it wanted)." , and CANCELLED the rest of the application. Mind you, I had NOT completed the Application, so theoretically, no LinkedIn "Account" was created...

        Too late! My work email, which had been blissfully SPAM-FREE for two years, INSTANTLY started receiving about a dozen pieces of SPAM per day!

        It eventually (almost) stopped; but I learned a valuable lesson: Despite the language regarding "We won't sell your email addy into cyber-slavery", it's all a big lie (go figure!)

        So that, was that. I stuck my toe into Social Media, and promptly got it bitten-off. So, no more for me!
        • by Falos ( 2905315 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @04:55PM (#49394103)
          > my boss sent me a LinkedIn invite
          I've seen this before. I think their system does it unprompted.
          That is, your boss has no idea s/he invited you to jack shit.
      • by paiute ( 550198 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @07:34PM (#49394963)

        Too many people wanted to vouch for my skills.

        This is what makes LinkedIn 'references' bullshit. People have recommended me for skills they can't possibly know I even have. It devalues the whole system.

    • by sh00z ( 206503 ) <sh00z.yahoo@com> on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:46PM (#49393127) Journal
      The same way we can't seem to function without carrying a mobile phone 100% of the time. I really wish I could leave mine behind more often and not be labelled as antisocial. I swear I'm the only person in my subdivision who isn't talking on the phone while walking my dog.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:50PM (#49393165)

        I swear I'm the only person in my subdivision who isn't talking on the phone while walking my dog.

        That's a friendly neighborhood to all be willing to walk your dog...even if they do talk on the phone while they're at it.

      • by Vlad_the_Inhaler ( 32958 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:27PM (#49393511)

        What can I say?
        I *am* antisocial. If I'm outside walking/cycling/skiing/whatever, I don't want to be telephoned. Interactions are face to face or not at all.
        I may have a google+ account (it came with the gmail address, which was a necessity when I bought an Android phone) but that does not mean I have ever used it, or the gmail account. No Facebook, no Linkedin, no Whatsapp, no whatever-the-other-one-was-which-Rupert-Murdoch-bought. I don't see a problem.

        • by Oligonicella ( 659917 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:42PM (#49393643)
          Agree completely. Don't deal with any of those and have a good social life. I think a lot of people are mistaking drive-by one-second chats or texts with "social life". It's not, really.
        • by Altrag ( 195300 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @08:21PM (#49395159)

          I *am* antisocial.

          Interactions are face to face

          You're doing it wrong.

          or not at all.

          That's the ticket!

          I have a phone. Almost never use it for calling people and rarely get calls on it either. I use it more as a glorified GPS+music player+reminder pad+internet browser+basically everything else a modern phone can do except actually be on the phone.

          Honestly, I couldn't live without the thing anymore. Its just so damned convenient for everything. Being able to receive phone calls is almost a detriment to an otherwise amazingly useful tool.

          That said.. if you want to talk to me, I'd much rather you send me a text message. I hate when people just drop by out of the blue. I hate when people call out of the blue. If you want to do lunch, text me a time and I'll get back to you when I can. The only acceptable reason for a call rather than a text is if you want to do lunch in the next 10 minutes and "when I can" may not be a reasonable response time.

      • by Marginal Coward ( 3557951 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:31PM (#49393555)

        I swear I'm the only person in my subdivision who isn't talking on the phone while walking my dog.

        Likewise, if you haven't bought a phone for your dog yet, I'm afraid I'll have to report you to the ASPCA.

      • I really wish I could leave mine behind more often and not be labelled as antisocial.

        It's not antisocial to not be on your phone. In fact, it's the antithesis of not being antisocial.

        Imagine what would happen if people weren't on their phones every waking moment. They'd have to TALK to someone they met on the street. How weird is that?
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Just do it. Once I realized that people who I enjoy talking to don't care if I have a phone, my life got a lot better. $80/mo is better spent on bar tabs with friends than on a cellphone. I sleep better, work better, think better, and live better. Granted, I've got a google voice number so people can text me, but I check that when I check email, 3 times a day. The people I want to spend time with find me valuable enough to call or schedule ahead, and the people who are offended that I'm not obligated to imm

      • Do what I do... forget it. I'll often just let it ring, too. But that's because I'm the one in charge of my phone, not the other way around.

    • 5 digits? You got SIX!! Maybe you're a mutant? Let me count your fingers.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      ...difficult to even maintain a proper social life without a social media account

      Don't try to socialize with fucking morons.

      • by AntiSol ( 1329733 ) on Friday April 03, 2015 @01:41AM (#49396247)

        This.

        I've been told a couple of times that calling/emailing/texting me is too hard, that they do all their socialising via facebook, and it's inconvenient to contact me any other way.

        Setting aside all the privacy implications, If you can't be bothered talking to me as an individual rather than as part of a herd, I'm not really interested in anything you have to say.

    • by Frederic54 ( 3788 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:59PM (#49393261) Journal
      LOL 5 digits :)
    • by doomicon ( 5310 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:07PM (#49393319) Homepage Journal

      Four digit codger here, I rm'd my facebook profile over a couple of years ago and haven't looked back. It's refreshing. As an uber tek nerd, mmo fiend, etc. now "old codger", take it from me... rm facebook, rm your mmo, limit Steam to a few hours a week, and go outside. Hike, Fish, buy a cheap sailboat and goto the Bahamas or the Keys. Stop searching online for that cool landscape wallpaper for the latest greatest distro you installed, and go outside and see that beautiful landscape in person.

      • I've no facebook. I purposely use G+, since no one is on it, and I get some good tech feeds on it. I don't miss social media (and yes, i said I have G+ and say I don't really have social media).

        I was on the Internet in pre-web days. FTPspace back then. Sumex-aim anyone? Does anyone else know that Wuarchive is not about the Wu-Tang? Sadly neither responds to pings anymore.....

        But even though i saw the web grow, then web 2.0, and now the "everything needs a social network angle" web, I never thought tha

      • goto the Bahamas or the Keys

        Are you sure that won't be harmful?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:19PM (#49393425)

      Well, as a 5-digit ID owner, I can confirm that the only thing that not being on Facebook has brought me is more free time. I do have a Xing profile and that one is the only thing professional contacts ask to be linked to. For all others, email and/or phone number is quite enough. Of course, I am doing the "technical career" thing, where I actually improve my skills and capabilities and it is important what I can do, not who I know. If you do the bullshit/old-boys-club career, then things like Facebook may be critical.

      • by Wintermute__ ( 22920 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @05:34PM (#49394357)

        Pssshh, 80k...

        But seriously, confirmed. Never had or wanted a Facebook account (or Myspace, shudder). Idle Linkedin account that I got talked into making when I was job hunting a few years back, but it was never really useful for anything. If you can't be bothered to e-mail or call me, I guess you didn't need to reach me that badly. My social life is plenty busy, and like you say, my technical skills, knowledge, and experience are more important to employers than my "social media footprint" (eyeroll).

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          I think these people drive themselves into a panic by vastly overestimating the worth of social media. And if a prospective employer was more interested in my "social media footprint" than my knowledge, experiences and capabilities, _I_ would be walking out the door.

    • by gatkinso ( 15975 )

      All I have are Slashdot and Github. If they ask for anything else they can blow me.

  • yes and no (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bkr1_2k ( 237627 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:38PM (#49393065)

    I get having a "professional" social media profile (a la LinkedIn) but no way in hell is a personal profile going to be up for discussion in any job interview I have. My private life is my life, not my employer's or prospective employer's. If they can't understand that I don't want to work for them anyway.

    I don't give a shit, in my personal life if people "expect a facebook". I don't even have all my real-life friends associated with my one social media profile, I'm sure as hell not handing it out to every person I meet at some bar or party.

    • Re:yes and no (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:48PM (#49393153)
      Seconded. it's illegal to ask about family and religion at a job interview in the US because it permits discrimination based on whether you think someone will ask for extra days off. Employers skirt this and other equal opportunity laws by asking for your Facebook info instead. If they're playing that kind of game I don't want to work for them.
      • Re:yes and no (Score:5, Interesting)

        by TWX ( 665546 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:55PM (#49393213)
        I wonder if it would work to get around that to say that you use your Facebook for private religious purposes...
    • Same here. I have a LinkedIn account because I am a freelance contractor, and use it as a means for contact and resume (to supplement my own website)--however even that is not updated often and is mostly static and has no picture. However, I have not had a Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram account ever, nor do I intend to. Friends and family who post things on Facebook, I tell them straight out, I will not get or see whatever they post, and if they want to share family or baby pictures, or a message to me,
  • Take Me As I Am (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RevSpaminator ( 1419557 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:42PM (#49393103)
    I don't use Facebook. I am on LinkedIn but I never update anything. And I don't care. If an employer wants my years of experience they will take me as I am. If they are going to reject me because I don't waste time on Facebook, then I probably wouldn't last long there. Their loss.
  • by globaljustin ( 574257 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:42PM (#49393105) Journal

    tl:dr - use whatever internet system that has the functions and control of your data that matches your requirements

    First, employers are not demanding LinkedIn pages or broadly looking down upon applicants without a facebook...and the idea that they mentioned it in an employment situation, with all the laws in place about fair hiring, *multiple times*...it seems like exaggeration...

    However, the question of what kind/how much of your life to share on the internet is definitely a worthy question.

    The answer is the understand the function and complexity of the system, the internet in this case. Facebook is one system of many. It has characteristics. One is the default to "sharing".

    Instagram is another system...it has less information and simpler controls on "sharing"

    **your instagram or twitter can hook into your facebook**

    so, a person could use exclusively Instagram, Twitter or even a blog of their own creation, and have it **auto-post** to facebook...thereby having dynamic content on their page without ever going to facebook.com regularly.

    the answer is CONTROL

    what "social media" internet system should you use?

    the one that has the FUNCTIONS you need and gives YOU the CONTROL over your data at a level you are comfortable with

  • Fine with me (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Intellectual Elitist ( 706889 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:46PM (#49393133)
    Nonconformism is always viewed with suspicion by the masses. Either you have the courage of your convictions or you don't. Any company that's going to judge me based on the lack of a Facebook account isn't someplace I'd want to work.
  • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:47PM (#49393139) Journal

    Or a phone, for that matter.

    You can always send a letter. It's not like it's a big deal if we can't get to you TODAY. Anyone who doesn't plan more than a few days ahead is just asking for trouble anyway. The US was founded in a time when it could takes months to get a response from Europe.

    So, no, it's really not necessary.

    • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:01PM (#49393283)
      Businesses need to be mindful that employees can ignore them in any communications medium that the employee has access to.

      I get a cell phone stipend through work. As such, if they want to get ahold of me in-real-time they call me. No other medium has an instant confirmation that that they've reached me upon actually doing so. If you need me right now don't e-mail me, don't SMS-message me, call me. I might be in a building that makes for poor service. Odds are if calling me doesn't result in my answering the telephone, I won't be able to receive text messages or e-mail either.
  • by exaptation ( 173881 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:47PM (#49393141)

    The reason employers want everyone to be on social media: They can use it to gather information about you that would be illegal or inappropriate to ask in a job interview.

  • Very simple answer (Score:5, Insightful)

    by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:47PM (#49393145) Journal

    Whenever someone asks why you don't have a social media account, all you need to tell them is:

    I'm not a narcissist.

    You don't believe your life is anyone else's business, no need to show them pictures of your latest adventure, no need for gratification from the unwashed masses. You are who you are.

    • by shadowrat ( 1069614 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:05PM (#49393303)

      Whenever someone asks why you don't have a social media account, all you need to tell them is:

      I'm not a narcissist.

      You don't believe your life is anyone else's business, no need to show them pictures of your latest adventure, no need for gratification from the unwashed masses. You are who you are.

      ah yes. It's a classic page right out of "how to win friends and influence people". Impress them with your smug sense of superiority!

    • by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @04:38PM (#49394023)

      Tell them you never saw the need. That your close friends and family don't use it much so you never bothered.... Although your sister has one and all does is plays are silly games and gossips all day and you really don't have any time or interest in that.

      Then deflect the idea that you are somehow superior to people who do have facebook accounts by just discussing something you ARE active in.

      The key is to appear "normal but without a facebook account" rather than "secretive or condescending".

      Once you've leapt over that hurdle, you can talk about privacy harvesting, the study showing that facebook corresponds with lower levels of happiness, the estimated $30 billion in the US alone in lost productivity due to time wasted on facebook, the risks of oversharing and that anything on the internet is public and forevor, and then joke about the absurdity of voluntarily "joining an advertising company".

      By the end of most conversations I have with people about facebook they don't think I'm suspicious or condescending or weird. I haven't sold them them on closing their account and I always concede that facebook has its uses and agree that its great for keeping in touch with friends and family abroad... although I already use X,Y,Z for that myself (steam, skype, facetime... whatever...).

  • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:48PM (#49393151)

    Is living without social media possible in 2015?

    Stupid question. It's not only possible, it's easy. I've never had a Facebook or Twitter account and frankly it hasn't mattered a bit. Those services offer me nothing I value. If someone thinks you are odd or "recoils in horror" that you don't bother with Facebook then that tells you everything you need to know about them right there. Someone who looks down on you for ignoring the latest fad is an idiot you probably don't need to associate with. You don't actually need to know the banal details of everyone's Facebook account to have an active social life.

    You do not need Facebook to have friends.
    Nobody really cares what you say on Twitter.
    You can get a job without LinkedIn.
    Plenty of ways to share photos without Instagram.

    Have we forgotten how to function without Facebook?

    No. Seriously Facebook is NOT and never has been a necessity for most people. If Facebook entertains you then by all means have at it but it is unequivocally not a necessity. Email might almost be a necessity though even that is debatable.

    • I do not have a Facebook or Twitter account too. I do read some tweets posted by some people, but I have blocked Facebook IPs in my router.

      I do not put my real name somewhere public. This is the reason why I do not have an account at radiomuseum.org too (even though it would be useful to me, much more than an account on Facebook).

      If people want to contact me, they can call me or email me. I do not see a reason to have another account, especially with a company like Facebook. I think that the NSA and the equ

  • WTF (Score:4, Informative)

    by aaaaaaargh! ( 1150173 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:50PM (#49393163)

    I don't have a FB or LinkedIn account and get along just fine.

  • I'd like to know why people consider Facebook to be the epitome of social media when Slashdot's been in the business for way longer.

    Really... take a look at someone's profile on here sometime. You can learn a lot about a Slashdotter with an account. No need for Facebook.

    Not to mention the fact that Slashdot accounts get ranked at the top of search results....

  • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:53PM (#49393195)

    FB / twitter/ myspace/friendster/ whatever are the exact opposite of 'social'.

    Reading people's status updates, or liking a photo does not constitute being social. Having people over for dinner, meeting for coffee.. that's social. Basically; interacting face to face is really the only acceptable definition of the term.

    Things like FB detract from that, giving a very poor simulacrum of social interaction -- all the while further removing ourselves from actual social interactions and pushing the boundaries of autism ever outward.

    Civilization has existed for ~12k years, human beings have not changed. Social interaction has not changed -- deluding ourselves into thinking that "Social Media" is somehow a surrogate, or worse a replacement, is top shelf idiocy.

    • by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:08PM (#49393335) Journal

      That's interesting. I'll remember that the next time I have a huge swath of common interests to talk about with people I've just met at a weekend convention - common interests we discovered not through weeks or months of guessing, but with a quick glance at a public profile. I'll remember that the next time I see my cousins and we talk about all the shared experiences with have with out kids - spurred by our keeping in-touch through FB and seeing our kids grow up. I'm sure I felt that reconnecting with an old college buddy online was totally non-social. It was so non-social that he used FB to let me know he was going to be in my town for a night on business, and we get together at a pub and killed a couple of pitchers of Guiness over the course of a long evening. I met a woman from England at an event about 4 years ago. We see one another - at most - once a year. But when she comes to the states it's like we've been best buddies the whole time and we always have a fantastic time together with friends.

      Social media, in general, is about keeping in touch with people and interacting. It doesn't take the place of face to face meetings - it bridges the gaps between those meetings. If you're not closer to your friends with social media than without, you're doing it wrong.

    • Civilization has existed for ~12k years, human beings have not changed. Social interaction has not changed

      12k years ago we were still in the paeleolithic. We don't have a lot of idea what social interaction was like back then but probably involved a certain amount of smacking each other with sticks and crudely chipped rocks.

      In the intervening millennia social interaction has changed out of all recognition.

      Your assertion that a chat on Facebook is not being sociable is pretty comical, and if you think it is so unacceptable why are you discussing the issue on slashdot? Surely slashdot is nothing but a geeky socia

  • by ninjagin ( 631183 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:53PM (#49393197)

    ... and yet I do have a LinedIn account... and I still have a few active circles in Google+

    I ended up at LinedIn just because it was the easiest and simplest way to keep tabs on people I used to work for and with. It's handy for that.

    As for Facebook, I just don't have any reason to use it. I like my current active circle of friends and we call and email each other directly when we want to be in touch. I'm not interested in the time-sink that it is for so many people. I keep hearing tales from friends about the politics of "friendship" and all the goofy crap they get from people they really don't know, or don't want to know anymore.

    I also don't want to share a whole lot of stuff with the wide-wide world. I don't want to read what other people are sharing. I just don't care about that crap.

    This notion that Facebook is a kind of adjunct to a resume is a little disquieting. I mean, if someone wants to know more about me, all they have to do is suggest that we go out for a long lunch or maybe a beer after work and I'm happy to talk about just about anything. No window dressing, nothing in print. If someone wants to get to know me, they can do exactly that, with me, in real life.

    Fortunately, I am also old enough that not having a Facebook page isn't so unusual in my age group. So at least I have that.

  • by Agent0013 ( 828350 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:54PM (#49393203) Journal
    I have never signed up for Facebook. I can count of the fingers of one hand with some fingers missing the number of times I have had someone say anything about me not having a Facebook account. I have seen online groups, where they have their own site nonetheless, where some of the members make meeting preparations or discussions on Facebook. I find this to be bizarre and completely rude to others. Why not keep your discussions on the site that was made for those discussions. If I want to communicate with people, I will use email or text messaging, or even a phone call. But then again, I don't want to broadcast my life to a bunch of strangers, so I must be weird and suspicious! I do have a Linked In account as that serves a different purpose. It allows me to keep track of work contacts for future use. Facebook has no use to me though and I will not get an account there.
  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:55PM (#49393221)

    From where I sit it marks people as obviously more intelligent. Both services are little more than negative lottery tickets for most people. They gain nothing on the upside and open themselves up to the wrath of the mob. http://digg.com/2015/shame-and... [digg.com] .

    If an employer has trouble with that. Just ask him if he wants to risk the splash damage of outrage directed at his employees, because they had the misfortune to say something that mobs of village idiots were waiting to misconstrue, or people who were looking for things to take offense at happened to find ?

  • I do it. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @02:57PM (#49393237) Homepage
    There area few ways to help you fit into the 'normal' life. Try these:

    1) Set up a personal web page - a blog, works, but it doesn't ahve to be one. You can put whatever you want on it. This gives people something to check online - but gives YOU the full control over it. No one linking to you, posting to your page, no advertisers steeling your information.

    2) Maintain weekly contact with your friends by hand. Pick a single day - Sunday, whatver - and email (or call your good friends) all your actual, real friends about what you are up to and ask questions. If they are really your friend, they will email you back.

    3) If a potential employer asks an inappropriate question be polite but call them on it in a way that makes you look good. "How often do you drink?" should be responded to with "I don't drink at all at work - do you have a problem with people drinking on the job?" Any question about your sex life should be politely taken as if they hitting on you. "I really don't think it's appropriate to date potential coworkers".

    4) Be ready for questions about Facebook and have a good answer to it. Something that sounds sane, rather than crazy. If you are female this one works VERY well "After I found out an X stalked me on Facebook, I decided to delete my account. I get so much more work done now." It also works for men, but not as well.

    Be prepared to lose some fair-weather friends/work. Just as a TV Producer would lose jobs if he decided to no longer watch TV. But your real friends and most worthwhile jobs will still like you. (Except with Facebook - if you want a job with Facebook, JOIN FACEBOOK)

    • Re:I do it. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by JohnFen ( 1641097 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @04:05PM (#49393825)

      "How often do you drink?" should be responded to with "I don't drink at all at work - do you have a problem with people drinking on the job?" Any question about your sex life should be politely taken as if they hitting on you.

      I've been to (and conducted) a lot of job interviews over the years, and have never once been asked inappropriate personal questions like those. If it ever happened to me, I would be too stunned to come up with a witty reply. Instead, I'd just be honest and say something like "your questions indicate that this is not a professional workplace, so I am no longer interested in the position" and leave.

  • Have a FB account don't use it. Have Twitter don't use it. Maybe I'm just super boring -- but I have nothing I feel the need to broadcast or share online. But seeing how we've invented words like "overshare" -- I suspect most people fail to realize that very little actually merits a twat or wallposting
  • by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:01PM (#49393279) Homepage Journal

    Facebook: Actual friends and interests you have.
    LinkedIn: Keep it strictly business.
    Twitter: To follow the odd interest.
    Google+: So you can say "I'm on Google+!"

    I hate it when you see someone posting the same tripe across all their social networks. No one on LinkedIn cares what you ate for lunch.
  • by ikhider ( 2837593 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:09PM (#49393351)
    I don't bother with facebook, twitter, linkedin et al because it does not serve my purposes. It is sort of like working a part time job and not getting paid for it. I don't see anything that productive coming out of it. Though, I am considering using alternatives like Quitter, Diaspora, among other GNU social alternatives. However, they do seem to require a lot of effort and am not sure I want to invest in my time that way. Things like Vimeo and Flickr make more sense (to me) as you can work on video and image stills and share with a community to get critiques on your work. As for employment, while some may not hire you if you don't do social media, people also lost their jobs because of social media. It is a sad commentary that people may not hire you because you don't have a bloody linkedin account. I've been spammed mercilessly by linkedin and recall a time they used to go through user contact lists on e-mail clients. (come to think of it, that is how they spam people...) I understand why linkedin does this, but it is also terrible etiquette.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:10PM (#49393359)

    I would wager that 80% of my social circle all don't have a Facebook account. (age 28-36), non-tech people primarily [doctors, grad students, mechanic, cooks, artists]; all university educated, and well-learned.

    It's generally not viewed as a "safe" item to have, or to participate in.
    We are the transitory age of people where the internet kinda took off during high-cshool, and for me, the huge dot-com crash happened the year before I entered college, so I was completely isolated from that entire scenario, and have no real context for it. But, it presumably shaped how our education was, and to be taught to be suspicious of consolodating information online, because "anything you say can and will be used against you"

  • by IcyWolfy ( 514669 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:13PM (#49393383) Homepage

    I would wager that 80% of my social circle all don't have a Facebook account. (age 28-36), non-tech people primarily [doctors, grad students, mechanic, cooks, artists]; all university educated, and well-learned.

    It's generally not viewed as a "safe" item to have, or to participate in.
    We are the transitory age of people where the internet kinda took off during high-cshool, and for me, the huge dot-com crash happened the year before I entered college, so I was completely isolated from that entire scenario, and have no real context for it. But, it presumably shaped how our education was, and to be taught to be suspicious of consolodating information online, because "anything you say can and will be used against you"

  • by alispguru ( 72689 ) <bob,bane&me,com> on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:16PM (#49393403) Journal

    I don't have any presence on Facebook. If asked why not, I point out the similarities between Mark Zuckerberg and Satan's representative on earth.

    However, my wife is on Facebook - she friends the children and handles any mass communications that must happen over there.

  • by JakFrost ( 139885 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:20PM (#49393441)

    Never had any of these "social" site profiles nor even any firm presence since the dial-up BBS days since none of them would make me any more sociable or charismatic since I'm a boring geeky nerd that only hangs out with other boring anti-social people. Instead I reach out of the people that I still keep in touch over direct communications methods or in-person and when I need to organize or attend a group even I send direct invitations or get them directly without broadcasting them publicly. Seems to work just fine and it's more direct and personal to keep in touch. Other people show up and disappear from my life if we don't communicate directly and that's normal part of life, the ones that keep reaching out to you or you to them mean something more and those relationships last longer.

    Judging from what I hear and I've seen about social media it seems like a waste of valuable personal time on mundane and boring things that people end up posting and others end up reading. If something is important enough for you to hear someone will tell you about it the next time you actually communicate with them directly.

    Old Codger Signing Off... +++...ATH...

  • by Optic7 ( 688717 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:21PM (#49393451)

    A facebook account is useful for a few things, like event invitations, birthday reminders, and getting in touch with some people who seem to use it as their principal means of communication.

    You can have a facebook account, and just keep tight control over what is on it, or even not post anything at all, or delete what you post after a while. This is basically what I do. I rarely post and sometimes go through and delete old posts. I also don't post any photos of myself on my profile, and don't allow tagged photos to be posted either.

    You can control most of this. You could basically treat your Facebook account like your LinkedIn account and keep it clean for a general audience. Get closely familiar with all the privacy controls as well.

    In other words, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      getting in touch with some people who seem to use it as their principal means of communication.

      So, how do you get those event invitations out to people who don't use Facebook?

  • by EMG at MU ( 1194965 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:25PM (#49393495)
    I really can't take this seriously. It seems like someone who works for Facebook wrote this.

    Millions of people have perfectly normal social lives without facebook or with really minimal facebook use. I know a lot of people who log-in once a week. I know a lot of people who go long periods of time without ever using facebook.

    I think the fact that the author thinks its almost impossible to live a normal life without it says more about him/her than it does about facebook.
  • April Fool's? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:26PM (#49393507)

    When I read the headline, I sincerely thought this was an April Fool's joke, but then realized it's the day after. How sad. I'll knock out some of the more egregious lines from your submission.

    "Employers expect a LinkedIn profile"
    I've interviewed on site (and was hired on with some) with Google, Amazon, Blizzard Entertainment, SpaceX, StackExchange, Lockheed Martin, Siemens, Disney, and more. Not a single one of these groups has ever referenced my LinkedIn profile at any point during the interviewing process. Where are you getting the idea that it's expected?

    "people you are meeting expect a Facebook account"
    Who? I meet my wife, friends, family, and their extended colleagues regularly without ever referencing Facebook. You need to elaborate.

    "I have heard that not having an account on the almighty Facebook could label you as a suspicious person"
    You know what they say about rumors and opinions.

    "I have had employers express hesitation in hiring me (they used the term "uncomfortable") and graduate school interviewers have asked prying questions regarding some things that would normally be on a person's social media page."
    Anything on a person's personal social media page is off limits during a professional interview. LinkedIn? Sure. Facebook? Why would they even ask? What kind of "prying" questions are they asking? What's your favorite movie? Are you married? Fortunately, you can easily turn these idiots down by rejecting their questions.

    "Is living without social media possible in 2015?"
    Yes. Next stupid question?

  • by v(*_*)vvvv ( 233078 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:32PM (#49393571)
    The youth are not embracing facebook. Facebook is a brand, and it is hated by too many taste makers. Facebook doesn't taste good. Any employer that likes facebook is already behind the curve, pun intended.

    Most people on facebook are not on facebook. They have inactive profiles. They may check to peep those who are active, but beyond that, there is very little utility or upside to those who quit caring. And this is always a simple function of time; everyone quits caring eventually. Facebook will continue to insist these peepers are "active" but no, this bluff was tried by Google+ and it won't fool anyone. Those looking for a job might clean up their profile just in case, but this doesn't mean they're on or using facebook.

    Facebook will become the next myspace. That's why Facebook, being run by people who know this well, is buying what could be to facebook what facebook was to myspace. That's why Instagram and WhatsApp needed to be purchased.

    Facebook is moving beyond a platform. Social media to them is now about real estate. You can move off from facebook to instragram like one would from Santa Monica to Venice. But your landlord is still facebook.

    Here is one concrete example of why Instagram is amazing and Facebook sucks. When a brand posts something on Instagram, there is no "promoting" their post, there is no "mining impressions", and there is no "paying for likes". There is no machine learning optimized feed. Instagram pushes a photo to everyone instantly, and the response is also unencumbered and immediate. And it has no ads. Unlike facebook, Instagram does not stand in between you and your followers. All their efforts into the quality of what facebook should be doing on facebook, yet the answer was to not be there at all. The presence of the "host" is not welcome in any social setting, not online or offline. We don't need the waiter or waitress to feed us at the restaurant while reading ads. That's facebook.

    Seriously, facebook sucks. It's future is dead. Even just for the reason that my mom has twice as many friends than I do and all her peers love it. She just turned 70.
  • by Cro Magnon ( 467622 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:38PM (#49393599) Homepage Journal

    If I don't have a FB account, people think I'm suspicious. If I do have a FB account, people KNOW I'm suspicious!

  • Try Before Buying? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by camperdave ( 969942 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @03:52PM (#49393717) Journal
    Facebook, Twitter, Google+... All of them require a signup before you can use them. Well, how am I supposed to know if I want to sign up, if it's worth signing up, if I can't try before "buying"?
  • by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @05:11PM (#49394215)
    " Others have literally recoiled in horror at the idea of someone not being on Facebook. " I have not seen that in big firms, or in established firms with somewhat middle aged people. In younger start up maybe, but If a firm is suspicious because I don't use facebook, then frankly it is not a firm i want to work with : they are being suspicious of innocent things, so their paranoia will probably extend to worst things once you are in.
  • by Capt.Albatross ( 1301561 ) on Thursday April 02, 2015 @06:00PM (#49394535)

    I confine my activities to the antisocial media, such as Slashdot.

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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