Local athletes on MySpace: How much do you want to see?
Maybe you're familiar with MySpace.com. Maybe you're not.
But chances are, the next high-school-aged athlete you see probably is. And there's a good chance he or she has already created a page on MySpace, probably full of personal information, photos, likes and dislikes and comments from other MySpace users. And it's all there for you, me or anybody else to find within seconds.
In fact, MySpace pages have become so popular among high school and college athletes that schools like Louisiana State and Northwestern have suspended athletes because of inappropriate content. College coaches routinely scrutinize the pages of potential recruits, and some coaching staffs appoint assistant coaches to randomly check MySpace pages of current athletes throughout the school year to avoid potentially embarrassing or illegal content.
The athletes, of course, can avoid all of this by adhering to what one college coach calls the "Grandma rule." If your MySpace page includes anything that you wouldn't want your Grandma to see, you should remove it. Another solution: MySpace users have the option to click the "private" setting that prevents any unauthorized visitors from seeing the page's content. Consider it the online version of closing your curtains at night before you get undressed.
And now the dilemma: Would you look through those bedroom curtains if they're left wide open?
SemoSportsWeb.com already has already posted dozens and dozens of personal web sites of athletes and sports personalities from across the region, all of them available on our links page. But we're on the verge of taking what appears to be the unprecedented step of listing the links to the MySpace pages of familiar names in Southeast Missouri sports, whether they're athletes, coaches or others involved in local sports.
There are good arguments on both sides. Some people have told me that MySpace users never intended for their personal pages to be made available to the average web user, so they should remain that way. Others counter that unless users mark their profile as "private," it can be seen by parents, teachers, school administrators and coaches within seconds anyway. And besides, should they have something to hide?
I'm eager to hear your thoughts. So far there's a list of about 30 MySpace pages ready to add to our links page with more to come; most of them are mature, interesting and hardly scandalous, but some of them don't come close to meeting the Grandma rule.
The question is: What do we do?
3 comments:
do it. do it. do it. no reason not too.
I've got myspace and i'm a High school Athlete. I'd Show anybody on the semosports website my page... But i dont want to show the whole world my, myspace.
If they decide not to hit the privacy tab, then it is fair game to all. If they aren't responsible enough to handle this, then they shouldn't be given a scholarship to earn a free degree.
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