6 Matching Annotations
  1. Aug 2017
    1. I even have a couple of colleagues that create dummy Twitter accounts so they can follow and discuss conversations about sports that they don’t people to know about. The key point is that you can create any identity you so choose.

      another example of this would be a "finsta" for millennials

    2. In a Post-Snowden world, we understand that there really isn’t any difference between our actions in the online world, and the “real spaces” around us.

      Our lives in digital and real can often intersect - who you are online is a piece of who you are in the real world

    1. By having a manual of who we are, and who we would like to be digitally, we can create consistency in how we represent ourselves.

      In other words, our digital identity and actual identity should match?

    2. At this point, you should consider how far you want to extend this version of your digital identity you’re in the process of creating.

      At what point are you going "too far" when sharing your digital identity?

    3. Build yourself a scrapbook in Pinterest or some other bookmarking tool to collect these resources.

      This is important to have common ideas grouped in one specific setting so you won't go scrambling for the ideas or lose ideas that you once had

    4. Web literate individuals have a multitude of opportunities to utilize digital spaces and tools to create versions of our identities.

      In more ways than one we have the ability to freely express ourselves on the Internet and not be conformed to just one identity. We can be whoever we want to be on the Internet and control how we are willing to use the space.