How to avoid “oversharenting”
Growing up, I never had tan lines. Want proof? There’s a color snapshot on display in my parents’ home: a naked 2-year-old is shown from behind, climbing up a bathroom counter. For as long as I can remember, a framed 3×5-inch print has sat next to the sink where it was taken. My dad doesn’t carry a copy in his wallet. My mom hasn’t distributed it to family or friends. Up until now, unless you were invited into my childhood home, you never would’ve known this cute little portrait even existed.
Proud parents have been perfecting this genre for decades. While the intimate moments themselves remain largely unchanged, how we choose to share them—much like the tools for capturing them—has evolved dramatically since my parents first became parents in late 1979.
Today, the default is, of course, Facebook. Although privacy settings allow us to control which circle(s) of friends has access to parts of our profiles, many people either don’t understand how to use them or prefer not to. Plus, like record labels and print publishers, parents are discovering that once content becomes digital, it can be easily copied and redistributed willy-nilly (hello, grandparents!). The result: photos of kids in compromising, colorful circumstances, and status updates recounting even more compromising, colorful circumstances, intended for a select few, are now spread out over the Web for everyone.









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Avoid Facebook shares like the plague. I’ve never seen such a valueless IPO in the making.
John the Libertarian on May 15, 2012 at 9:49 PM
Why is this important enough to be on Hot Gas?
RedNewEnglander on May 15, 2012 at 9:49 PM
Like the Time cover.
WeekendAtBernankes on May 15, 2012 at 9:50 PM
Ha, well played. And true.
Bats Global was worse.
WeekendAtBernankes on May 15, 2012 at 9:54 PM
Phew! I thought this was going to be another gay thread, that “sharenting” could be a new way to describe same sex parenting.
Buy Danish on May 15, 2012 at 9:59 PM
Ha, like carsharing except with a kid.
WeekendAtBernankes on May 15, 2012 at 10:42 PM
Facebook is just another useful tool to sort out stupid people. There is nothing wrong with sharing average trip photos of your kids for your other family members to see, or other normal activites. People who put questionable content on Facebook (naked pictures of their kid or drunk pictures in the bar) deserve the consequences of their actions, even though it may be years later. If people don’t have the judgment to use it responsibly then they are probably too dumb for the job anyway.
ktrich on May 15, 2012 at 11:24 PM
I recall the horror of going to someone’s home to see them drag out their home videos and vacation pics. They were boring then, it’s just as boring now. What ever happened to keeping your private affairs just that? It seems like this tendency is from the “everyone is special” mindset. News flash, you aren’t!
roy_batty on May 16, 2012 at 7:50 AM
I am sharing this on FB to discuss it with my friends.
bitsy on May 16, 2012 at 8:26 AM