Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Search
75.1 F
Salt Lake City
Saturday, May 24, 2025
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contests
  • About The Globe
    • Staff
    • Jobs
    • Issue PDFs
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy Policy
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
The Globe The Globe
The Globe The Globe
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Home Online Exclusive Facebook: To post or not to post
  • Online Exclusive
  • Opinion

Facebook: To post or not to post

By
Alexandra Jeffs
-
March 29, 2011
0

Do you really know what happens after you click “post” on your Facebook wall? It floats around cyberspace forever. Every random thought or interesting fact we post about our lives sits in the realm of Facebook world. There it lies to be ingested, prodded and dissected by whoever is enabled to look at it. Privacy is taken more lightly than ever before.

SLCC Communication major Chelsea Ericksen exclaims, “I Googled my name the other day and found a post I had made five years ago come up that was used as a comment on another friend’s page. I haven’t even had a MySpace account since high school.”

The Internet seems to holds more personal information than we can keep grasp of.

With the social network age in full swing, Twitter and Facebook have become useful sources to find personal information about prospective employees for employers. Robert Jeffs, current Utah State Bar President used Facebook to narrow down potential receptionists for his law practice.

“A resume is not an accurate view of who [that] person is. They show what they believe I want them to tell me,” Jeffs said on how he narrowed it down from 85 to 6 people.

Facebook has settings for people to show only certain information. Not all people set those privacy settings, and that is where the cyber network can be either a neutral asset to you, or a detrimental one.

“Not only could I put a face to the resume, but see insight into that person’s life. For instance, I am looking for a long-term employee and I ran across a few that made comments about not being able to wait to get out of Utah,” Jeffs said.

Jeffs also said that Facebook gave him a good indication of the lives the prospective employees led. Jeffs works at a family law firm in Provo, Utah and wants to hire a person with a strong work ethic.

“I was able to see if that person had somewhat of a drug or alcohol personal life from comments other people made on their wall,” he said.

Though this is a partially biased statement, there is valid truth to the remark. Professional businesses want a professional. If vulgar or inappropriate information is floating around and kept in open conversation, it can be harmful to you when looking for a job.

Alexandra Jeffs
The Globe
ABOUT US
About The Globe
Staff
Jobs
Issue PDFs
FOLLOW US
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • About The Globe
  • Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
© 2025 The Globe