Social Anonymity

Thanks to the miracle of RSS aggregators, I occasionally read Prokofy Neva’s blog. Part of it is because I still log into Second Life on occasion (if nothing else, it’s an online world entirely unlike my day job) and he is one of the few commentators on that. Part of it is because it’s just randomly fulfilling to see exactly how ad-hominem someone can go in one’s undying hatred for the net.intelligentsia that Prokofy roundly loathes. And occasionally, part of it is because he gets something right.

Like today, in the midst of yet another flamewar with another well-known SL blogger, Prokofy writes:

Of course, despite the always-on, always-share, Exposed Me quality of social media, we’re not supposed to ask what is behind what already seems like a deep exposure. We don’t Need to Know whether someone is 20 pounds less or ate burritos or clumps of spinach for lunch, but we’re told this Too Much Information and then…we’re supposed to shut up.

This is what I mean by social media as being such a burning lie — such a subterfuge even as it discloses and exposes.

In real life, your very close friends who would tell just you — and not the entire world — that they were losing weight because their doctor warned them of a heart attack or because they needed a new girlfriend. That is, their valiant acts would come bundled with other relavant just-for-you news.

In social media fake life. somebody broadcasts their diets all day and their health eating and you feel like you’re getting bulletins from Susan Powter and Richard, the sweating to the oldies guy, but you aren’t hearing what’s *really* up. And you don’t dare comment or ask, except in a superficial way, because then you’re rude, etc.

Social media like Second Life (which I clump together with this phenomenon, although they’re different) also creates such fake and false friends. You think someone you’ve talked to nearly every day pleasantly, with understanding, with solidarity, with shared insights, with cameraderie is your “friend,” but they aren’t really. Of course you don’t know them and can’t see their *real* setting.

Whis is true. We post things daily, hourly, minute-by-minute about our lives, not to reveal things about ourselves, but to throw out chaff so that the radar of other people can’t lock on to us. I dare say that most of you know very little about *me*, the person, because I don’t care to reveal much beyond the public persona. If you’ve friended me on Facebook you may know a bit more. If you know me in RL you may know a bit more still.

I’m pretty sure the count of people who know I’m trying to lose weight right now, and why, number at about 3.

And I don’t think the Internet, or social media, or any other buzzword, harbors responsibility for this essential alienation. I think our culture in general teaches us that we keep our enemies far and our friends farther. We don’t know our neighbors. (I’ve spoken to mine only a few times; when the police came by to inform us that one was a fugitive and asked if we had any information on him we could only shrug eloquently) We fear revealing too much online, entirely correctly, and then reveal entirely inappropriately too much at random moments (such as myself, one paragraph above this one) that, because of the shock of the reveal, is ignored and perhaps filed away to solve later, like some sort of mystery.

And tales of the sordid everyday lives of others are some of the most popular entertainment that we have. It’s not that we don’t want that connection, it’s just that we don’t particularly know what to do with it when we have it. And this is also why we flock to online worlds, for at least some of us – because it gives us very low-impact and low-danger social connections; communication outside of ourselves and our little packets of worlds.

And which is why ‘guild drama’ are some of the most compelling stories from online worlds – because we want the soap opera. We want that participation in the lives of others, even when – especially when – it all goes sour. Because it’s something outside of ourselves.

Or we could just go outside and meet other people and talk to them about things. But that’s overrated. I mean, it’s HOT out there this time of year.

  • http://www.4rca.com Breed

    TMI ;)

  • http://www.maniasarcania.com/ Mania

    Speaking of oversharing, I’ve recently been diagnosed as autistic — which is probably why I have always been drawn to MMOs as “very low-impact and low-danger social connections”. I’m okay with that. I’ve no intention of going outside to meet other people and talk to them, because that’s just not me.

  • Athryn

    I agree and disagree with some of what you’re saying. I, for example, post my SportyPal workouts (a gps thing that tracks how far i walked and such) on my Facebook profile, and I like it when people like it, or post encouraging comments.  I also met my current SO through Dark Age of Camelot, so the idea of getting to know someone virtually isn’t alien to me.
    I also come from that pre-internet culture of the BBS world, where people would actually get together at a pizza place to meet the people you would normally only see online. Of course, that small tight knit community went away when the internet exploded, and a person across the country was as close as the person next door.

  • Zuzax

    The summoning has begun.  Now we wait for it to appear.

  • http://whatwouldmattdo.com Matt

    I find I don’t share things with people on the internet…because they are assholes.

  • Elovia

    “I find I don’t share things with people on the internet…”

    Irony. Funny.

  • http://www.whatwouldmattdo.com Matt

    Elovia

    If you don’t like irony and/or sarcasm, the internet might not be for you.

  • http://www.poesies.com Cedia

    I was just thinking about this earlier.  Back in the old days (I mean The Realm and UO), people treated online worlds as just that — an online place where you can live out another persona that had nothing to do with real life.  People didn’t give out their real names, people didn’t really talk about themselves, they were there to game, or, as I was, to roleplay.  It was a game… it was a hobby… it was something you did for a few hours every night because it was fun.
    Nowadays I believe that online gaming has become a substitute for real life.  So many people I meet online, when they actually let you get to know them “behind the mask”, they are emotionally shut down.  I don’t know, but I think it’s because our society bombards us with so much lately and people feel obligated to buy into it.  Information/emotion overload, and we, as human beings, are not made for that.  We are organic, we are not computers.
    For about five years I was in the same situation, and then something both wonderful and terrifying happened to me that woke me the fuck up.  I made a huge decision to change my life, and, as I hit rock bottom, I turned to God, someone I had turned away from long ago.  I actually went to church, because, even though I was uncomfortable with it, I had nothing else.  And let me tell you, I found “real” people there.  People who weren’t afraid to feel things.  People who weren’t afraid to be positive.
    Getting away from the online “world” was the best thing that ever happened to me.  I still play WAR because my roleplaying friends are still there.  But I am by no means as hooked into MMOs as I once was.
    And yes, all of the above is too much information.  :D

  • Elovia

    Matt,

    *blink* Do you jump to knee-jerk conclusions much? Oh wait, don’t answer that personal question unless you want to share the answer with anonymous strangers who just might read it. :P

    I’m comfortable with the internet. Thank you for your concern.

  • Ibn

    This is like the third time this week I’ve been reminded of this old Cracked article. Very appropriate for the topic of discussion:
    http://www.cracked.com/article_15231_7-reasons-21st-century-making-you-miserable.html
    7 Reasons the 21st Century is Making You Miserable.
    #4: Online company only makes us lonelier.

  • ixobelle

    …and yet again I will mention the “Connect with Facebook” & “Sign in with Twitter” buttons that reside mere milimeters from your comment form.

  • Brask Mumei

    Cedia: On the bright side, hitting rock bottom with MMORPGs has less physical consequences than hitting rock bottom with drugs & alcohol.
     
    As for Lum’s reveal, better ++ the number, as I have rightly guessed he’s trying to squeeze into the lower weight class in his prize fighting gig.
     
    What I dislike about this damn culture of oversharing is this assumption that everyone is doing it.  It blindly ignores the fact that, by definition, those who don’t share aren’t going to show up as not sharing.  Its this marginalization of normal people by these Xenotics, these aggressive socializers who can’t take a breath without some form of grooming having taken place.  Cause that’s what I see the chaff as – constant social grooming as we pick lice out of each others hair.  But at least that was productive.
     
    BTW, considering that head lice can only exist on the human scalp, and considering that we can successfully eliminate it from people, WTF do we still have head lice in 2010?

  • sdgfdg

    “WTF do we still have head lice in 2010?”
    People crossing the border from impoverished nations sometimes bring diseases and parasites with them that they can’t or won’t be treated for in their native country.

  • http://ixobelle.com ixobelle

    GOD DAMN IT, MEXICO.

  • http://stabbedup.blogspot.com/ Stabs

    Meanwhile in a sleepy Mexican town a mother is telling her children not to play with Americans as they’re dirty and give you head lice.

  • http://geldonsgaming.blogspot.com geldonyetich

    So, am I to look at the rise of online social networks and how few of us have ever met our neighbors and say then that there is a precious elusive thing which is lost: the ability to truly know another person?
    Maybe I would think that if I weren’t beholden to the belief that utterly knowing another individual is an impossibility born of our limited senses.
    Wanting to suss out people that well is begotten of a certain desire to able to predict them, and only leads to hurt feelings when they behave in a manner that contradicts your imagined conception of them.
    Whether I’m addressing your name on a page, a virtual avatar, or the person themselves, the only criteria I reliably hold them to is this: they are an individual.   Anything experience builds on top of that is a hypothesis.

  • Caya

    Dunno, I’m pretty close to our neighbours (I grew up in this particular surburbia, as did most of them, and we’re sorta community – I help their children with their homework, who in turn mow my lawn and so on) and I still love the low-intensity contact the internet provides – which isn’t to say that this contact can’t become something more, after all, my husband and I met in Meridian59 :) . But I’m rather shy usually and really appreciate the extra breathing space. And no, I’m not on Facebook or anything similar – I can see the appeal but I’m not into that kind of oversharing.

  • Xaldin

    I tend to actively avoid any sort of close relationships in RL so the online world is no different for me. I’m polite, nod, smile, frown etc but I don’t -want- to actually know the details of anyone. Heck I don’t even talk to my parents except in a very superficial high level (as in ‘yeah I’m still alive, oh you are too that’s good. hows the house’ type of manner). Never about why I’m doing something or even whats going on if I have a choice. Oddly enough I met my wife online and she managed to get close (obviously) but she’s the only one.

    The whole sharing what’s going on day to day or in some tweeters case every few minutes with just anyone browsing along is a foreign concept to me. Both on the why to share and the why do I care.

  • Gaidin

    I think that the vast majority of the social networking/MMO/blogsphere comes from the feeling of a loss of community.   Up until the concept of industrialization, these communities were physical and intimate.  Even as industrialization changed small communities into cities, the church kept people connected.

    Now, with 40 years (let’s say) of the decline of the church, many people are looking for a replacement.  I think this is also why we see more nastiness/crime in the world today.  Without knowing the people in your neighbourhood (physical or virtual), it makes it much easier for people to cross a ‘line’ with strangers that they would not cross with people they knew.  There’s no feeling of accountability anymore.
    Of course, the Internet doesn’t add the accountability in its communities either, which may be the reason it’s destined to fail as a replacement.

     

  • http://weblog.probablynot.com Jason

    One of the things I dislike most about Facebook is the de-emphasis of groups.  They are still there, but I can’t put their updates in my feed, I can’t make them more important than the random bleating of people I used to know but haven’t spoken to in years and the inane drivel of the things I liked or became fans of.

  • http://twitter.com/Scahrossar Belsameth

    What I find interesting is that there’s already 20 comments and nobody asked you why you’re loosing that weight. It’s not even mentioned save for a joke about prize fighting. Guess that proves your point, in part.
    So… Why are you trying to loose weight?

  • Brask Mumei

    Gaidin: I think this is also why we see more nastiness/crime in the world today. 

    Interesting theory. But where is the evidence that there is more nastiness/crime in the world today?

    But, I guess you are right. Things were better when we were all serfs working the fields. The crime rates were necessarily low: being abused by your betters didn’t count as a “crime”.

  • Rob

    I always thought Prokofy was a woman behind that cartoon mask.

  • Docmdnite

    I enjoy the anonymity(sp?) of the online communities I participate in. I have always said that at the end of any given day, I could walk away from all my online “friends” never to communicate with them again and not lose a SECOND of sleep about it. I used to, on occasion, mention that and once in a blue moon someone would actually take offense to that. I found it strange how that would upset someone who knows nothing about the real me, I know nothing about the real them, and if I hadn’t of shared that sentiment and just disappeared, they would think nothing of it.
    Oh, quick off topic question: What ever happened to Foton? I LOVED his blog.

  • http://wowpanda.blogspot.com/ wowpanda

    Brask Mumei: Interesting theory.But where is the evidence that there is more nastiness/crime in the world today?But, I guess you are right.Things were better when we were all serfs working the fields.The crime rates were necessarily low:being abused by your betters didn’t count as a “crime”.

     

    That is actually so very true. Also under communist Russia/China (20 year ago) there is no ethnic/religious tension, wealth envy, because most of the time people are thinking about how to feed themselves than others.

  • Carson

    Docmdnite: I enjoy the anonymity(sp?) of the online communities I participate in. I have always said that at the end of any given day, I could walk away from all my online “friends” never to communicate with them again and not lose a SECOND of sleep about it. I used to, on occasion, mention that and once in a blue moon someone would actually take offense to that. I found it strange how that would upset someone who knows nothing about the real me, I know nothing about the real them, and if I hadn’t of shared that sentiment and just disappeared, they would think nothing of it. Oh, quick off topic question: What ever happened to Foton? I LOVED his blog.

     

    That’s fair. I can really only see people being offended if they felt differently of you, and by your comment discovered that you very clearly didn’t feel the same way about them.

    I have a different connection to (some of) my online friends than you do. Some could vanish I may just shrug, not notice and/or occasionally mention wonder where so and so went – oh well (I probably wouldn’t have referred to those people as friends in the first place).

    Then there are (a very few) others that I really would lose sleep over and I would worry. These are the ones I talk to either daily, or near enough, and have done so for years. And I do know about their day to day lives, their partners/spouses/family, and/or have met/spent time with outside of game.

    I only really put thought into it when the realID feature came out from Blizzard. I immediately knew who I would realID friend and who I wouldn’t (i.e. everyone else). Making that choice brought it into conscious thought for me… yeah these people are my friends. It was swirling around in my unconscious somewhere before that, sure, but I never really put a specific thought to it until then.

  • Toastrider

    Kinda feeds into a comment I made once.
     
    While I understand blogging, I don’t see the attraction of Facebook or Twitter. Posting random essays online is one thing, but Twitter and FB seem geared towards minute-to-minute updates — and folks, I don’t know about you, but my life is NOT that interesting. You do not want to hear bite sized tidbits about dog brushing or bowel movements.

  • http://www.facebook.com/sheree.nikstaitis Sheree Nikstaitis

    Facebook is convenient for people who like to keep in touch with friends and family, but don’t have the patience or time to visit with them all individually. Granted, there are levels of sharing that differ between individuals – I don’t care what you had for lunch necessarily, but I may care where you ate and how it was, particularly if I’ve found your opinion valuable in the past. I enjoy the sharing and I can say with certainty that I’m more in touch than I was prior to Facebook, even if there is a greater amount of fluff. I was never good at remembering to pick up the telephone. Or answer it, for that matter. I don’t feel like I’m trying to avoid radar, on Facebook.
    On the other hand, I don’t keep gaming friends on the same level, and I don’t link WoW with Facebook/my real name (but oddly, I don’t mind linking Facebook for random blog/news comments). I damn sure spread the chaff around liberally for gamer friends. I’ve seen too many gamer “friends” that I  pegged as sane turn into bags of dumbfuckery for bizarre reasons (whether this is commentary on my own judgment or gamer-sanity is another topic entirely).  With RealID is becoming mandatory for many guilds, including my own, my slow decline towards the dreaded “casual” status is almost complete.

  • http://twitter.com/D_0ne D-0ne

    We used to read books.

  • Ironwood

    You know, sometimes it works the other way though.  My example for this is that Lum added me on steam at one point.  To this day, I’m not sure why.  If he wanted to ask me a question, or if it was an automatic thing as part of an f13 group, or if he just wanted to boast that he too had a ‘Scottish Friend’, the way some people like to boast of Gay or Black friends.

    One of these days my steam will light up with that inevitable question and until then, I am content to wait with bated breath.  I’d imagine it’ll be something trivial like ‘Do you really deep fry Mars Bars ?’
    :-)

  • Sweetmeat

    I think the disintegration of close links in society started a while back.  With large population centers, convenient transportation, and leisure time available, people have begun grouping themselves in “communities” according to their  interests and hobbies rather than by where they actually live.  The internet has made that sort of fragmentation even easier.  The problem with these friends, is that most of them are just there for the activity, they aren’t there to look out for each other in the rest of their lives.  In the past, neighbors would look out for each other, and community was defined by this, but now, we don’t know our neighbors and the communities we participate in are not there to look out for us.  It leaves all of us semi-detached, and lacking a social support system.  With families moving away from each other this detached-ness is even more pronounced.
    Strangely enough, the internet has blunted this effect somewhat for my family.  We (me, my dad, a brother in-law, two nephews from different sisters, and my cousins daughter) play DiabloII over skype every Wednesday night.  It brings a sense of togetherness that had been lacking to a large degree over the last 20 years when most of the people involved were living far from each other and had little interaction.  It’s not so much the DiabloII that we’re there for, it’s to be around family.
    It should be interesting to see how this whole thing evolves.

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  • john smith

    http://www.wow.com/2010/07/06/official-forum-changes-real-life-names-to-be-displayed/#comments
     
    Oh hey guys, looks like the doom and gloom negative nancies were correct. If you want to post on the forums… HELLO REAL ID. More invasive changes that you will never be able to avoid or opt out coming soon :)

  • Ashendarei

    D-0ne:
    We used to read books.

     

    I still read books :-/