Feb 5, 2008
Being socially exposed is AOK when people cannot hold meaningful power over you. Such is the life of most of the tech geeks living in Silicon Valley. But I spend all of my time with teenagers, one of the most vulnerable populations because of their lack of agency (let alone rights).

Self-exposure is critical to the coming of age process — it’s how we get a sense of who we are, how others perceive us, and how we fit into the world.

Forced exposure puts this population at a much greater risk, if only because their content is always taken out of context. Avoiding exposure for them is not a matter of security through obscurity, it’s about only being visible in context.

Danah Boyd highlights an overlooked implication of eroding privacy

Comments gratefully appreciated. Please send them to me by any method of your choice and I'll include them here.

archive
projects
writings
videos
subscribe
Mastodon
RSS (?)
twtxt (?)
Station (?)