Social media
poses digital dilemmas for journalists
by
Alfred Hermida
June 8, 2007
In the hours following the Virginia Tech
shootings in April, people caught up in the tragedy turned
to social networking sites, blogs, e-mails and other digital
technologies to express themselves. On one particular site,
Facebook, pages were transformed into impromptu memorials
to the victims of the shootings.
Since its launch in February 2004, Facebook has become the
place online for students to hook up with friends, chat and
share photos. Originally set up as a site for students at
Harvard University, it quickly expanded to other colleges
and later high schools. Last September, Facebook opened its
virtual doors to everyone and it now has 23 million members
worldwide, 10% of them in Canada. But this also meant that
what had once been the sole preserve of students was now available
to anyone with an e-mail address.
The site was buzzing with activity on the day of the Virginia
Tech shootings. Traffic increased five-fold in the space of
24 hours. The circumstances were particularly suited to a
world of new media in which anyone can publish and disseminate
information. The Blacksburg campus was full of young students
equipped with laptops and cell phones. Once police had locked
down the area, the students turned to the tools they were
familiar with to find out what was happening.
Students in their dorms turned to Facebook to check on friends,
share snippets of news, talk about their experiences or mourn
the 33 victims of the rampage. Reporters were quick to sign
up for Facebook accounts to find people touched by the campus
shootings. This digital door stepping provoked a wave of resentment
from students, as if the reporters were eavesdropping on conversations
between friends.
In the physical world, the campus was quickly swamped with
journalists. CNN alone sent 100 staffers to Blacksburg. Students
engulfed in the tragedy were uncomfortable with the intrusion
into their grieving. Online, it was almost as if the reporters
were not just camping outside the dorm, but barging into the
rooms and leafing through personal journals.
“You have reporters that will create a Facebook identity
just to get students’ contact information, or who will
start an online memorial to get people posting for a story.
It’s just inappropriate,” Virginia Tech student
journalist Courtney Thomas told The Guardian newspaper.
The scramble for coverage online throws up many issues about
journalism ethics in a digital age. It also raises questions
about notions of privacy at a time when many young people
are living their lives online. It might be naïve of the
students at Blacksburg to consider their pages and comments
on Facebook or other websites to be private. After all, the
Internet is the most public of mediums. Information online
is available to anyone, anywhere at any time.
But the problem is that many of the young people who sign
up to sites like Facebook or MySpace do consider these bits
of cyberspace as their own personal space. In a way, the Internet
has become the place to hang out for teens. Instead of chatting
in the playground, or going to the shopping mall, today’s
youth go online.
University of California-Berkeley researcher Danah Boyd argues
that as parents have tended to restrict the physical movements
of their children, teens have turned to the Internet to escape
from these physical limits. Social networking sites offer
an arena for teens to do what teens do – express themselves,
make friends and make sense of their place in the world. Profile
pages are a place to say, “this is me,” which
explains why some MySpace pages are a cacophony of design.
They reflect a stereotypical teenager’s bedroom.
A teenager might consider this virtual bedroom as a private
space, open only to friends. But it is part of a global network
of information, where anything you publish will be archived,
be discoverable through a search, and be easily copied and
disseminated to anyone in the world. How could anyone then
believe that anything they do online is private?
Boyd argues that most people who join social networking sites
believe in the concept of “security through obscurity”.
The idea here is that unless someone is of particular note,
why would anyone be interested in their profile page or their
comments?
This is a reasonable assumption, as millions of people have
pages on Facebook, MySpace and other similar sites. But Virginia
Tech showed that social networking sites are private spaces
only as long as their users are not making the news themselves.
The concept of privacy through obscurity breaks down people
who hunt for information for a living take an interest, as
happened following Virginia Tech. Students on the Blacksburg
campus lost their shield of obscurity when the college was
propelled into the headlines.
The instinct of reporters is to chase scoops and exclusive
interviews. But the etiquette of digital door stepping is
an untested area. Similar questions arise over the use of
first-hand material culled from social networking sites. This
content is both private and public at the same time. It is
private in the sense that it was intended for a specific audience
of friends. But it is also publicly available online. This
is a new ethical area for journalists. Understanding how people
use and relate to sites like Facebook or MySpace is a first
step towards resolving these digital dilemmas.
PROF. ALFRED HERMIDA is an experienced TV, radio and online
journalist who joined the faculty at the School of Journalism
from the BBC. He is a multimedia journalism pioneer, having
been a founding member of the award-winning BBCNews.com website.