The case of Cody Hill caught my eye today in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. The 18-year-old Californian is facing murder charges after hitting a pair of cyclists, killing one. Obviously, my keen interest in riding is at cross roads with freedom of speech. Was I happy that yet another scofflaw driver who maimed (this time killed) a rider was facing ultimate justice? Was it fair to have a Twitter record used to upgrade charges?
On the same day, there is a lengthy feature that highlights the particularly twisted and sick practice of LOL RIP trolls.
I find myself upon the verge of a kids-these-days-get-off-my-lawn-pull-up-your-pants rant.
Deep cleansing breath. After all, it is Sunday.
This boils down less to a change in the coarseness of society or a lack of respect for life among youth into a really serious lesson in digital accountability. My old "once posted, always available."
Cody joins Jacob Rees of Oregon, caught for his drunk driving hit and run by his own tweets. While Cody has the right to be young and stupid about his life, what he overlooks is that by leaving behind a trail of digital crumbs, he cast his own fate. He made his own reputation as a reckless youth permanent.
The details of the case are particularly gruesome on their own. A 57-year-old couple, riding in a bike lane, get plowed into by Cody doing 83 in a 40 zone. The wife is dead; the husband's leg broken. From the start, his braggadocio tweets about driving fast were noted by locals.
The police (not unlike Astoria, Ore.) used the digital record and his driving offenses to plead for an escalation of charges.
I can't quite decide if my pound of flesh for the injured and dead riders is what makes me feel this was necessary to show others that you really can't just do whatever they hell you want - both online and on the road.
Which leads to the other story. Matthew Kocher's parents became the surf-by victims of trolls who think it is either funny or part of their mission to hijack Facebook and other memorial social pages. I do have some significant trouble thinking about people - likely not only kids - who get perverse pleasure in trolling around memorial websites. It seems like Westboro Baptist for the online world.
One can only hope that eventually digital responsibility catches up with them.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Once Posted, Always Available
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
The Politics of Friending
After spending Monday discussing the power relationship dynamic of faculty and students when it comes to social media, this note arrives in the email courtesy of Bulldog Reporter. In the marketplace, the feeling is mutual, rather than directional.
While the focus with faculty is to make sure they understand the unintended power consequence of asking to or allowing selective friending, in the workplace, bosses aren't comfy being followed by reports and vice versa. These numbers are rising from a similar poll five years ago, perhaps a reflection of a growing understanding of the impact of being social.
An interesting side item: if managers aren't real keen mixing business with social inside the office, they are really not OK with clients or vendors "just trying to get to know you." Check out the chart in the story on the response groups, and five good suggestions on office Facebook etiquette.
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Fun with FOIA -- Northern Style
A tip of the hat to the D1 Ticker for this note on how bloggers and participatory media (read: message boards) used open records laws to discover potential blackball moves against Stony Brook by Hofstra.
Quaint echos of almost a decade ago in Arkansas . . .
Monday, August 12, 2013
Recruiting's Productivity Tool?
Great note coming through The Chronicle regarding a Texas A&M study on "tech savvy" for student affairs -- actually more social savvy.
Monday, August 05, 2013
Inside the 49ers Studio
A great short read from the new executive producer for the San Francisco 49ers on his philosophy (shocking - influenced by NFL Films) toward video for the team. All poking fun aside, the Steve Sabol quote is one that should be pinned up on every branded media internal video operation's wall:
“Tell me a fact and I will learn. Tell me a truth and I will believe, but tell me a story and it will live in my heart forever.”
It's refreshing to know the 49ers top press conference problem -- hey, we can't hear the questions at press conferences -- brings a universality to that age old problem. (Look in the first comment under the story for this).