In an article in today's NY Times, Brad Stone reports about the escalation of the public persona (I just want to be loved!):
" A wave of Web start-ups aims to help people indulge their urge to divulge — from sites like Blippy, which Mr. Brooks used to broadcast news of what he bought, to Foursquare, a mobile social network that allows people to announce their precise location to the world, to Skimble, an iPhone application that people use to reveal, say, how many push-ups they are doing and how long they spend in yoga class.
Not that long ago, many were leery of using their real names on the Web, let alone sharing potentially embarrassing personal details about their shopping and lifestyle habits. But these start-ups are exploiting a mood of online openness, despite possible hidden dangers.... To Silicon Valley’s deep thinkers, this is all part of one big trend: People are becoming more relaxed about privacy, having come to recognize that publicizing little pieces of information about themselves can result in serendipitous conversations — and little jolts of ego gratification."
1 comments:
That's such an interesting/cool point. I've watched it go from "OMG I CANT SHARE MY REAL NAME" to this... and the transition wasn't even all that gradual. I wonder what exactly caused people to change? Did they just become more familiar with the web?
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