Picture
taken by Jonathan Acuña at Parque Francia, Panama City, Panama (2017)
Blurred Boundaries
in Social Media
A simple
ethical solution
By
Prof. Jonathan Acuña-Solano, M. Ed.
|
|
Head
of Curriculum Development
Academic
Department
Centro
Cultural Costarricense-Norteamericano
|
Senior Language Professor
School of English
Faculty
of Social Sciences
Universidad
Latina de Costa Rica
|
Tuesday, July 28, 2020
Post
352
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Opinion Prompt
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For example, you have been
working at a new job for six months and are starting to become friends with
some of your colleagues. One of them sends you a friend request via Facebook.
· Would
this be a problem for you?
· What
are the ethical issues around blurred boundaries that most affect you?
|
Starting new relationships with people
at a new job is something normal all of us go through. Befriending others is
part of being a social being, and this will allow to create and foster a comfortable
atmosphere in the workplace. However, when people want to see a bit more than
your professional persona, this desire can be the fagots of firewood needed to
start a fiery bonfire. In other words, can others get to see the difference
between your personal self and your professional online persona especially if
the existing boundary is rather blurry? The problem with blurred boundaries is
that they are like a bleak island where anything can manifest and then take
shape and substance in many various ways.
Would a friend request via Facebook be
a problem for me if it comes from a new co-worker? To be honest, it would not
be a problem at all; I would simply tell my new partner that I do not have a
Facebook account because I have never believed much in this particular social
media site. I would also inform my partner that I do not have any intention, in
the near future, to open an account, either. I may also suggest him to follow me
on Twitter where I have a professional account that I use to get information
from publishing houses and English Language Teaching (ELT) experts. I would also
state that though I have this Twitter account, I am much of a passive user
because I only use it to get information and not exactly to share information.
I bet this answer will suffice, and my partner and I can go on with our
relationship as if nothing has happened. And somehow my private life is not at
stake.
Now, if you ask me about ethical issues
around blurred boundaries that most affect me in this “friend request” scenario,
I have some things to say. Back in 2004 Facebook was born, and through that
decade it became more and more popular. Consequently, a lot of people I knew at
the time got engaged and started experiencing dire repercussions due to their
postings and statuses. Analyzing the situation, I decided not to mingle around
with others in social media sites just because. And the first thing I was able
to observe was the blurriness between people’s professional persona and their personal
online self. In my understanding of the situation, both things have collided
and turned into one. Can social media users pending approval of their friend
requests differentiate one from the other if profile owners could not set a clear
division?
Being rather dramatic in my statement
of the facts, this blurriness told me (and others) of shadows and forebodings
regarding the collision of online personas. I have a group of friends and
another of family members where we share stuff via WhatsApp, but I do not get
judged by a colored joke I send. But if I got to publish it on social media where
any co-worker or boss can see them, can somebody predict what their reaction
towards them will be? How will they judge me by not separating my hobby,
personal self from my professional, academic persona? We have seen it before,
when postings in social media can turn into a storm in a glass of water, and people’s
careers can be severely affected.
The ethical solution is simple if you
do not want your postings to be labeled inappropriate and disrespectful. The
nuances can be plentiful when people start to decode your messages out of
context through their local media outlets; misunderstanding will be very much
present. For this reason, and as a sound suggestion, both selves must clearly
know where the boundary between them is, and trespassing must not be allowed. A
blazing torch should not be needed to find the boundary on social media blurry
surface; it must be clearly drawn.
Blurred Boundaries by Jonathan Acuña on Scribd
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