On Wed, 26 Oct 2011, David Alanis wrote:

> I am not saying that you've ever made bad choices about what you post on 
> your facebook account. But someone that may not necessarily think the 
> world of you can potentially use it against you (of course I am just 
> kidding).

We leave a digital trail on the web, and we should consider what it says 
about us every time we post something.  Unlike a lot of things about me, 
Facebook isn't visible to the entire world (at least not the way I have it 
configured).


> Nevertheless, here is a recent show on this american life (that you scan 
> stream ) about a man Joe Lipari who posted a "threat" on his facebook 
> account and got visited by the local police.
>
> http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/414/right-to-remain-silent

How is that different from posting something on one's personal web site, 
sending a threatening email message to a distribution list, sending a 
threatening letter or passing a threatening note, or just making a 
threatening statement to someone?  In other words, what does Facebook (or 
even digital technology) have to do with what happened to Joe Lipari?  I 
don't have time to listen to the radio show right now, so I'll have to 
ask:  Was he turned in by Facebook staff?  If not, I don't see this as 
being about Facebook.  Wait - I found it...

http://www.metro.us/newyork/local/article/902097--joe-lipari-the-poster-child-for-internet-stupidity

...and the story is that he was turned in by one of his Facebook 
"friends."  So I don't see this as a Facebook-specific event and 
especially not an event that has anything to do with digital privacy.

Mike