Peeping as Information Sharing – how much is a good thing?

marie the videographer 300x198 Peeping as Information Sharing –  how much is a good thing?On my recent assignment with CESO in the Philippines, I made it a priority to give people I worked with a voice; appreciatively inquiring into their stories.  I posted articles, including pictures and videos, to this blog.   All the while, in the back of my mind were questions like… Shouldn’t some of this stuff be kept private? Am I peeping in on what should stay personal? How much information do I need to share online to make a connection, engage another, build trust?

Questions around online sharing, and building trust and relationships, are being asked (and answered by social media mavens – e.g., Trust Agents) a lot these days.  With the ascendancy of social media technologies and applications, each week brings another way to share information.  What pace should one proceed down the sharing path?

On Peeping…

I got some further insight about online sharing on reading The Peep Diaries: How We’re Learning to Love Watching Ourselves and Our Neighbours. The author is Hal Niedzviecki, a journalist and social critic living in Toronto.  Peep culture is reality tv, Youtube, Myspace, Facebook, Twitter, blogs, chatrooms, over-the-counter surveillance technology, and the like.  The author lived all things Peep for a year, and his experiences are central to the book.  Here’s some interesting ideas and questions Hal raises in his book:

And so?

“Peep is a hybrid phenomenon.  It’s a combination of hyper-individualist excess, cutthroat capitalist self-preservation, longing for lost community, and our inherited hardwired need to make sense of life through narrative.   These contradictory interests mostly end up cancelling each other out.”

The moral of giving up our privacy? There isn’t a clear one.  We’re in a grey zone.

What’s your view?

Remember a time when letting your child venture outside the home, without supervision, was an ok thing to do?  How much do you know about your neighbour?  How is living the online, indoor life changed your relationships with others in the community?  How is increased online sharing impacting your values and beliefs?

If you enjoyed this post, I would appreciate if you left a comment or subscribed to my blog. Your feedback helps me make this blog more interesting and relevant.  Thanks, Ben.

Photo credit: showbizsuperstar

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