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Friday, March 09, 2007
Kathleen Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Youthful Indiscretions Online
by Kathleen Parker
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WASHINGTON -- It seemed like a good idea at the time.

How often have we all pasted that cartoon balloon over the mental image of a youthful indiscretion? Thank goodness no one had a camera, we might add.

Now everybody has a camera, and youthful indiscretions are captured for all time. And suddenly, we're not so young anymore.

The MySpace-Facebook-dot-com generation has come of age, and some are finding that their silly stunts have come back to haunt them as they enter the grown-up marketplace. Others are finding that their private moments are not so private after all.

Three young women featured anonymously in a recent Washington Post article told horror stories of their attempts to find jobs, only to discover that they may have been disqualified by online postings by virtual strangers. Gossip and graphics included.

One, a Phi Beta Kappa graduate and Yale law student who had gotten articles published in law journals, interviewed at 16 firms for a summer job and received no offers. How could that be?

It turned out that she and others had been discussed in not-so-flattering terms on an online message board, AutoAdmit, which is run by a third-year law student at the University of Pennsylvania and a 23-year-old insurance agent, according to the Post. The board boasts up to 1 million visitors a month, and postings can be anonymous.

And vicious.

Another woman featured in the Post story is a Yale law student and Fulbright scholar who graduated summa cum laude. Not only was she the subject of a derogatory AutoAdmit chat, but photographs of her were posted on a ''hottest'' law school student contest site with graphic discussions of her attributes.

Not everyone hates to be considered ``hot,'' but this woman was afraid to go to the gym because visitors to the site were encouraged to take cell-phone pictures of her. Beware the chatterbox in the shower stall next door. Another young woman felt afraid when online chatter about her led to an anonymous sexual threat.

The tension between free speech and privacy is nothing new, but the debate has become more complicated by the explosion in video portability and networking Web sites. In today's uncivil society, the stakes are high and the rules are low.

Invite anonymity to the mix and hostility finds release in the vacuum created when shame went missing.

Unfortunately for some, employers are now using the Internet to vet job candidates. They, too, can be privy to those just-for-fun college forays, as well as to commentary from those with an ax to grind. Continued...

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About The Author
Kathleen Parker is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Group.
 
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Uncle Max
Right on, Brother.
As a recently explained to someone else:

God's just about out of Bubblegum.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wp_K8prLfso

Reconsider Qualifications
The idea that a young person can have “high qualifications” and still be rejected by an employer is a difficult one for many of my students to grasp, as well. While I would agree that an organization that didn’t verify “some online dirt” before turning down a prospective applicant is being terribly unjust, given the prevalence of fabricated and malicious information on the Internet, it is also true that there is a lot of verifiable stuff out there that can be terribly damaging. The concept many of my students fail to grasp is that there are a lot of highly qualified young people out there, and when you have 5 or 10 or 20 excellent prospects on your desk, you are no longer looking for reasons to include (high GPA, honor societies, internship experience), you are looking for reasons to exclude. In other words, you’re looking for an excuse to toss an otherwise "highly qualified" application in the trash can. And when someone posts “edgy” pictures of themselves on their own site, has a DWI record, or even shows up at the job interview in skimpy dress or with visible tattoos or body piercings, it’s a reason to exclude. It is also a wake-up call for many of my students to realize employers do not offer positions based upon their own fear of being “a bunch of hypocrites” who may have done foolish things in their past. If possible, they’re hoping to find someone smarter than that.
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