Social Media Daftness

Someone posted an item on Twitter and has now been sacked.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-30700872

Is this sane?

Two issues:

  1. He’s (frankly) stupid enough to make such a crass joke in public. It’s not funny, and there have been previous issues with Twitter posts (Nottingham airport) being taken far far too seriously.
  2. His employer takes his Twitter post so seriously that it sees fit to terminate his employment. I’m surprised this is legal.

What’s my point? I guess the problem for me is that we’ve entered a period where our tiniest online utterances can haunt us forever. We’re now broadcasting globally, with no option to remove the article, however much we might regret it afterwards.

I reckon I’m lucky, I grew up with this happening, and I now have the wisdom not to say things I’ll eternally regret (at least online, and attributable to me). I’ll admit to have posted things I might now regret should they be traced to me, but these are not tied to any of my long-lasting online personae, so I hope I’m safe…

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