Wednesday, 11 April 2012

What To Put In Your Social Network Profile

By Owen Jones


Everyone has heard of social networking web sites. Social networks such as MySpace and FaceBook. Most surfers who are on line all around the world have at least one account with one of these many, many social networks. They allow people to find long-lost friends, stay in touch with family and make new contacts in places or even countries that they have never been to.

When you sign up to one of these social networking sites, you will be asked to fill in account details. These details have nothing to do with a bank account. Rather they are what most members call their 'profile'.

This profile can request fairly detailed questions on the pretext that the more information you give, the easier it will be for your friends to find you, should they become looking.

Typical questions are name, age, sex, address, schools attended, location of workplace, musical interests, hobbies, likes, dislikes, Yahoo, Hotmail and Gmail address book passwords and user names. They also want a photo.

They want your address book so that they can email your friends and tell them that you are now a member and offer them membership too. So, as you can see, it becomes vital to judge just how much detail it is prudent or you are willing to give away.

The first thing to bear in mind is: merely because a social networking site asks you for an answer to a question, do not feel that you have to answer it. For example, it is true that if you add lots of details and a photo, more people will recognize you and ike to make friends, but how many strangers do you want in your home town to know where you live, where you go to school or work and what you look like?

If you are worried that you may be easy for a predator to trace, lie about your locality. For example, if you live in a small town, say you live in the nearest big city but make certain you put a corresponding zip or post code from that city too.

If you post a photo, it is probably not a wise thing to put details of where you go and where you live. On the other hand you could supply those details so that friends can find you, yet use an avatar or cartoon to represent your image and use a nickname instead of your real name.

If you opt for a nickname, choose a sensible one. 'Hotand Lusty1990' or 'BigBoy1990' are not apt for most surfers no matter how funny you may think they are at the moment of registration. Do not include your age or a tell-tale to your age either, as in the above examples. People will take for granted that the number is your year of birth.

The guiding principle should be: how much would I tell a stranger if one came up to me in the street? Not much, almost certainly. Well, there could be thousands doing that in the virtual streets of social networking.




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