Facebook Etiquette Should Be Required Reading Before Posting....
The following etiquettes are
therefore not something which we should all strictly abide to. Rather, I must
emphasize that they are purely guidelines to enhance our social interactions
and experience with Facebook. The fact is that there is no one-size-fits-all when
it comes to social interactions. So, I encourage all of you to take these with
a grain of salt and apply them as you deem fit!
Five Dos:
1. Message
Private Matters Instead of Posting On Wall
As much as you may have
exhibitionistic tendencies and wants everyone to know your most intimate
secrets, others may not share the same inclination. Your friends might not take
it too kindly when you post what they did last night at your house party, or
any other stuff which are understood to be kept between your closest friends.
The fact is that most of their
Facebook friends will hear about it in such a public platform. The walls indeed
have ears, especially so for the Facebook Wall. Best to keep these
conversations behind closed doors in Facebook Messaging.
2. Be Mindful
Of What You Post
When you have hundreds of friends
and acquaintances in Facebook, you have people from all kinds of backgrounds,
all with different jobs, beliefs, personalities, etc. Updating your status with
a general statement may seem harmless to you, but others may read it in a
different light. For example, you make a remark about how advertisers con
unsuspecting consumers into buying something they don’t need.
What you may not realize is that
some of your friends in the advertising industry could see your status in their
newsfeed. It’s a general statement, but they might think you are targeting them.
Of course, it’s not going to be any fun if you’re going to consider all the
possible misinterpretations before you post anything, but just be mindful of
it.
3. Call Rather
Than Post Personal News
This isn’t just Facebook
etiquette; it’s social etiquette or even common sense. If you need to inform
your friends or your family about some important and personal news (e.g. death
in the family), don’t declare it out in the public domain. Facebook is a social
networking site; it’s supposed to be public. This means that people can know
what happened.
The other reason not to post
is courtesy. It’s the same reason why you shouldn’t use SMS (or
even the phone) to break up with someone. It’s rude and insincere to break
important news, be it good or bad ones, without having some form of genuine
communication through voice tones and body languages.
4. Reply To
Comments Especially If They Are Questions
You post a status, and your
friends make comments and ‘like’ it. I guess the least you can do is to
acknowledge them by replying something, especially when they are questions
directed to you. I’m not saying you should do it for the sake of doing it, but
add on to their comments once in awhile. If you ignore them all the time,
chances are that they won’t bother about your status anymore, lest they look
silly talking to a wall. It’s almost karma.
5. Avoid
Posting Comments On Every Post
If you’re stalking your friend,
leave it at that. Don’t make it a habit to make some comment on everything your
friends post or they’ll start to get suspicious. Even if you say with all
honesty that you are not stalking them, it’s not going to be easy for them to
believe that their status updates always appear on your newsfeed.
It’s open secret that everyone
checks out their friends’ profile every now and then, but to comment on
everything is to admit that you are constantly checking out on them. What is
even worse is that your friend’s friends might notice as well, seeing that you
are a ‘regular’ commenter. If you don’t wish to be labeled a pest, try to limit
your comments somewhat.
Bonus: Be
Careful Of Your Tone
As with all other online
communication, communicating in Facebook is mostly textual. We can neither hear
the voice tone nor see the body language when the other person ‘speaks’. In
other words, it’s easy for someone to think you are being sarcastic when you
are not, or misunderstand you in any other manner for that matter. To
complicate things, everyone has their own typing style.
One way we can compensate for the
lack of cues is to use emoticons. It’s pretty limited, but
experience has taught me that a simple smiley face after a sentence can do
wonders by neutralizing any potential tension. Smile and the whole world smiles
with you :)
Five Don’ts:
1. Make Friend
Requests To Strangers
Some people have this idea that
the number of ‘friends’ you have in Facebook is a status of your popularity in
real-life. That may be true if these ‘friends’ are people whom you know
offline, and not strangers whom you randomly add while browsing through the
Facebook network.
The idea becomes warped when
people add friends merely for the sake of boosting their ‘popularity indicator’
among their peers. That’s not cool. But if you wish to add someone for some
valid reason, like to get to know this girl you have a crush on, do so with
some introduction or through a mutual friend.
Skipping that step only leaves a bad impression of you, which is the last thing
you want.
2. Tag Your
Friends In ‘Unglam’ Shots
Guys may take it lightly when
they are tagged in photos that look as if they just woke up from the bed,
thinking that it’s a joke pulled off by their friends. When it comes to gals
though, appearing ‘unglam’ means a lot more to them. Of course, this applies to
some guys as well. What you need to take from this rule is to be
sensitive of who you might be tagging in photos, especially those
shots which are obviously awfully taken.
3. Overshare Yourself
Checking out the updates on your
newsfeed, you see the same friend updating his status over and over again. Not
any insightful ones, but just posts about what he’s doing every ten minutes.
How exciting. You decide to hide his posts.
Sounds familiar? Probably. It’s
annoying because no one is really interested in their friends’ everyday mundane
activities, yet it just keeps popping out in their updates. Spice up your
status updates a little. Instead of telling your friends you’re in the can
taking a leak, share something interesting about yourself.
4. Vent About
Your work
Facebook is a double-edged sword
when it comes to its social networking capability. The boon is that it enables
us to connect in an unprecedented manner with friends of friends of friends
through the identification of mutual friendships. On the other hand, the bane
is that there’s easily a way to gather information about you by passing through
such layer one-by-one.
Even with your most stringent
privacy settings, there’s still a risk that what you post can reach people you
wouldn’t want it to reach, and your co-workers and boss are the last people you
want to mess with. So, just play safe and leave your venting to somewhere
private.
5. Post Chain
Status Updates
Remember those chain e-mails that
demand you to forward to all of your friends or you’ll die a horrible, horrible
death? Well, Facebook has a similar kind of chain, but usually for a good
cause. Someone first post a status update about a social cause, encouraging
those who read it to post the status too, so that their friends will get to
read it and post it as well. This chain thus spread the cause, raising public
awareness.
The intention here is right, but
sometimes too much of a good thing isn’t good. When you see your
newsfeed updates filled with the same status, you get annoyed instead, and you
associate your negative emotion to that social cause.
Bonus: Flame
Others
Everyone is entitled to state
their own opinion on the free internet, so there’s no need to put anyone down just
because you disagree (or worse, don’t like the person). Sometimes I even
see people criticizing the comments of their friend’s friend who replied to the
post, whom they don’t even know. It’s embarrassing not only to yourself, but to
your friend as well.
In the spirit of good
conversations, let’s keep this in mind in whatever communication we have
online, in Facebook, forums, emails, etc. Don’t ruin it for everyone.
Conclusion
At the end of the day, it’s
entirely up to us to follow these etiquette rules. I guess it’s about finding
the balance between the being fun and sensitive to everyone. On one hand, we
shouldn’t restrict ourselves with rules and regulations that would limit our
creativity and spontaneousness of our social interactions. On the other hand,
we ought to be aware of the publicness of Facebook to protect our privacy and
at the same time respect the fact that each one of us forms part of the Facebook
experience of everyone else. Find that right balance and you’ll not
only better that experience yourself, but also help others enjoy it as well!
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