Frienship is the subject of this exercise, but not in the way you know it. How so? Danah Boyd, a social networking pundit, puts it this way:
“Are you my friend? Yes or no?” This question, while fundamentally odd, is a key component of social network sites. Participants must select who on the system they deem to be ‘Friends.’ Their choice is publicly displayed for all to see and becomes the backbone for networked participation. So, participants publicly identify their 'friends.' That's something new, fair enough. But the backbone for networked participation? Imagine this scenario: Herman gets home from school on friday night and has no idea what he's going to do for the weekend. He logs into his MySpace profile and sees that more than 20 of his MySpace friends are also logged in. Instead of reaching for his phone, he writes up a short posting on his bulletin board ("hey - is anything going on tonight?") and clicks send - this goes to everyone on his friends list. Within a minute, four of his MySpace friends have added 'comments' to his profile with invitations to join them. Let's take a few steps back - imagine how much easier it becomes to stay in touch with friends you'd typically lose site of. From high school? College? Three jobs ago? Do you see the value here? Why should any of this matter to libraries? Our patrons, the younger ones in particular, are using MySpace like we use the telephone for communication. If we're on MySpace and other social networking sites we'll be there when they need us.
Discovery Exercise
Remember, you are welcome to cancel your MySpace account when we've finished up the Learning 2.0 program. Here's what you'll do:
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