Chapter 7 - Digital Footprints

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34 Terms

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controversy of 2021

teen vogue writer was forced to quit before she started bc of racist and homophobic tweets from a year ago

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summer of 2017 harvards admissions scandal

rejecting 10 students for what they said in a fb GC

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FB group was called "

harvard memes for horny bourgeouis teens

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what was in the harvard fb group

memes that trivliazed pedophilia, sexual violence, adn genocide

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message from the 10 harvard students is to

not post anything bad on the internet

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what question did Brady robards and Sian Lincoln think for their research

what will today’s teenns think later in life, when theya re confronted with digital artifacts of their teen years

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how did robards and lincoln cover this study

interviews 20somethings who were part of the 1st generation on social media site, where in each interview they kept scroling back through timelines as they rediscovered old posts and tags

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chief recations from the robards and lincoln study

panic urgency anziety

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what did the regrets of teens reflect

that the stuff in the past or stuff i may say in the future may carry over far beyond that moment an have disastroues eeffects into the present

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Sherry Turkle’s quote in Life on the Screen in the 1990s

virtual communities offer permission to play, to try things out

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how has turkle’s perspective changed inthe modern day

online anonymity is a thing of the past

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Finstas

2ndary instagram accounts

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richard blumenthal cringe moment

“will you commit to ending finsta?”

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Tama Leaver, Tim Highfield, and Crystal Abdein emphasize instagrams importance on

funamental co-creation of digital footprints by its social media users

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one analysis of 289 #ultrasound images shared on social media ___% of images had charactersitcs such as baby due date, mothers name, or location of scan

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to teeangers, adults posting pictures of their kids is hypocrtical bc

they emphasize such an important notion of taking care of one’s posts and respect wishes of what is and isn’t shared

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14 yo Sarah’s impulse to get a receipt of her peers hate speech and her hesitation to share it, detailed in the

“When Peers Hold the Cards” box

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results on teens in 2018-19 about the following questiosn

“collges should judge social media for admissions”

“reasonable for people to face consequences for psots in middle and high school”

no clear majority stance, they were polarized

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results on teens in 2018-19 about the following question

“if someone makes an offensive comment on socail media, people have the right to call them out even if it hurts their reputation”

63% majority

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efforts supporting the erasure of digital signature are supported thorugh the

“Right to be Forgotten” in the EU’s 2016 General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Legislation

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“right to be forgotten” legislation, describes that

requires companies to delete data about private citizens if they personally request it

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what is discussed in Kate Eichorn in The End of Forgetting

what are the defintiions wihtin the right to be forgotten, such as a private ctiizens, what if they get fame nad they don’t want it in the future, what if they didnt want to be famous in the first place

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whose work determined fixed and growth mindset

carol dweck

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what would a collective growth mindest look like according to Loretta Ross

“call-in culture”

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private and public corrections made to prioritize learning an growth in a community

call-in culture

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call-in culture is made to be an antidote to

cancel culture

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#1 most common worry in the original survey from the intro

risks to private information

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what did the author realize while writing her book disconnected in 2014

there were 3 distinct wys teens viewed online privacy issues

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3 distinct ways teens viewed online privacy issues

privacy is in your hands, privacy is social, privacy is forsaken

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prvacy is in your hands parrots the message of

adults and internet safety programs in privacy being your responsibility; from password management to avoiding reckless ahring, and managing privacy settings

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privacy is social

reflects the realities of co-construction, forged with the social ties you have (sending fake nudes to your friends to confirm, vet photos before posting on instagram)

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privacy is forsaken

once content is posted online, it is open for grabs

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personal privacy management in itself seems pointless and counstructs a false sense of security

networked defeatism (part of forsaken privacy)

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what teens want adults to know

yes we know that passowrds needs to be strong, but for digital footprints, it is necessary to realize that they will mes sup bc of how tight the tensions are currently