Add Us On:


Q&A

Have a question about how to delete digital drama from your life? You can submit questions to be answered by trained experts by sending an email to QandA@athinline.org. We will not be able to post an answer to every individual question, but we will answer the most common, so check back often.

To share your thoughts, or ideas on how to make things better (education, laws, etc.), please weigh in on our official Facebook and MySpace pages, or on Twitter (#athinline).

If you need help for yourself or a friend, please don't post it online -- sharing sensitive personal information online could make your situation worse and potentially compromise the safety of you or people you care about. PLEASE head to the Get Help section of the site, where you can connect personally with a trained expert or access immediate help.



QUESTION

I was having a convo with my friend via twitter and we said some bad things about another girl, but she didn't have a twitter so we didn't think she'd see it. She found the tweets right after we posted them and got upset at us, but we never intended for her to see them! Was it still wrong for my friend and i to post those things?

ANSWER

I think so, and here’s why.

As soon as you post something online, you give up control of where it goes and who sees it. Even if the girl doesn’t have a Twitter account, she can still see what was written about her. It’s easy for someone following you to retweet your tweet, or to cut and paste what you wrote onto a different site, like Facebook - even with privacy settings. Since retweeting and cutting-and-pasting are so easy to do, your tweets could reach a much larger group of people than if you and your friend had passed a handwritten note back and forth in class. And you can’t tear up a tweet the way you can a piece of paper.

Even if you could somehow make sure the girl wouldn’t see what you wrote, you shouldn’t post bad things about her. Like you and your friends, she has feelings. The tricky thing about the Internet is that it’s difficult to see how our actions affect someone else, because when we post something online we’re looking at a screen, not a person. But just because we don’t see the people we write about online doesn’t mean they don’t feel the effects of what's been written.   

Katie Davis
Project Manager of the Developing Minds and Digital Media Project at Harvard Project Zero

Post A Comment

Q & A Archives

  • My friend and I said some bad things about another girl on Twitter and she found out. We didn't mean for her to see it - we're we wrong? Read Answer
  • Some girls are sending me mean texts and Facebook messages. I don't respond, but it's starting to hurt. What do I do? Read Answer
  • I sent some nude photos over the internet 6 years ago - are they still lingering around? Read Answer
  • I sent someone "dirty pictures" on my phone, what can I do? Read Answer
  • My gf constantly wants to go through my phone and when I tell her no she thinks I'm hiding something. Read Answer
  • Is bra and panties considered sexts? Is it just nude pictures that gets a person under 18 labeled as a sex offender? Read Answer
  • I often get insecure and ask my boyfriend who he is talking to, should I stop? Read Answer
  • About two years ago, me and two other friends decided to go onto another girl's instant messaging account. Read Answer
  • If a young male & female who are dating and both under the age of 18 are caught sexting and are reported to the police... Read Answer
  • My boyfriend took nude pictures of me, and now that have broken up he refuses to delete them. What can I do? Read Answer

Chatter

  • An online privacy company has developed two new apps that make us think about Facebook -- do you think they're helpful? http://t.co/Ttz0xNlp
  • This high school principal allegedly posed as a student on FB and friended real students and parents at her school! http://t.co/ylnaKnQC
  • We TOTALLY love this video of T.I. (@Tip) talking about cyberbullying. Visit @SavingDaughters to find out more! http://t.co/N61cmYTW
  • This Georgia teenager's family sued the girls who were cyberbullying her. Do you think it was a good idea? http://t.co/5OvUgZIW
  • The @HRC is doing a survey of young LGBTQ people ages 13-18 to help inform the work LGBTQ orgs do. Take the survey now! http://t.co/2MyDMHad
  • It's the last weekend you can post your action to unlock a secret Golden Egg level of @AngryBirds Space, so get to it! http://t.co/ce2Cy6hy
  • An Iowa paper devoted their front page to an anti-bullying editorial. How else can people get the word out? http://t.co/E8qIc0j3
  • ?Justin Bieber spoke out about being bullied and his thoughts on the Bully film. Have you seen it yet? http://t.co/qd0KIoop
  • ScarJo on her nude pic scandal: "I don’t want to be a victim and say, ‘Oh, well’ and just hide my head in shame." http://t.co/qyP8qAl2
  • Have you unlocked the secret @AngryBirds Space level? You can also earn points at @DailyFeats by posting your action! http://t.co/GObYFBij