€uroMeinke
03-19-2006, 12:09 PM
I love this topic so I had to link another article I saw this morning:
You Are What You Post (http://biz.yahoo.com/bizwk/060317/b3977071.html?.v=1)
A selection from the article:
One drizzly night in Seattle in 2001, Josh Santangelo was hanging out on his computer, clicking through an obscure Web site called Fray. After reading a post that asked if anyone had ever had a bad drug trip, the 22-year-old straightened up and began banging away. "Actually yes, about 36 hours ago..." he wrote. "Two Rolls Royces and four hits of liquid later, I was at a Playboy-themed birthday party with a head as dense as a brick.... It's hard to say no," he explained, "when a pretty girl is popping things into your mouth."
That was back when Santangelo was an up-all-night raver in giant pants and flame-red hair. Today he's a Web development guy with a shaved head who shows up at meetings on time and in khakis. Clients have included such family-friendly enterprises as Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=dis) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=dis)) and Nickelodeon, as well as Starbucks (NasdaqNM:SBUX (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=sbux) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=sbux)), AT&T, and Microsoft (NasdaqNM:MSFT (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=msft) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=msft)). You can read all about it if you Google (NasdaqNM:GOOG (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=goog) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=goog)) him, right alongside the bold-faced entry: "Josh Santangelo on drugs and...
"Oh, the horror. Shortly after Santangelo's late-night overshare, famed logger Jason Kottke linked to it on his site. That bagged so much traffic that five years later the "drug dump" still ranks No. 7 out of a total 92,600 Google hits that come up when you type in Santangelo's name. He says with a half-laugh that so far "it hasn't hurt me too bad," but he fears for the MySpacing, YouTubing, Facebooking masses -- the bloggers and vloggers (video bloggers) who fail to realize that there is no such thing as an eraser on the Internet. "I see people do that sort of thing now, and I think: 'Oh man, that could come back and bite you."'
You Are What You Post (http://biz.yahoo.com/bizwk/060317/b3977071.html?.v=1)
A selection from the article:
One drizzly night in Seattle in 2001, Josh Santangelo was hanging out on his computer, clicking through an obscure Web site called Fray. After reading a post that asked if anyone had ever had a bad drug trip, the 22-year-old straightened up and began banging away. "Actually yes, about 36 hours ago..." he wrote. "Two Rolls Royces and four hits of liquid later, I was at a Playboy-themed birthday party with a head as dense as a brick.... It's hard to say no," he explained, "when a pretty girl is popping things into your mouth."
That was back when Santangelo was an up-all-night raver in giant pants and flame-red hair. Today he's a Web development guy with a shaved head who shows up at meetings on time and in khakis. Clients have included such family-friendly enterprises as Walt Disney (NYSE:DIS (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=dis) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=dis)) and Nickelodeon, as well as Starbucks (NasdaqNM:SBUX (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=sbux) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=sbux)), AT&T, and Microsoft (NasdaqNM:MSFT (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=msft) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=msft)). You can read all about it if you Google (NasdaqNM:GOOG (http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=goog) - News (http://finance.yahoo.com/q/h?s=goog)) him, right alongside the bold-faced entry: "Josh Santangelo on drugs and...
"Oh, the horror. Shortly after Santangelo's late-night overshare, famed logger Jason Kottke linked to it on his site. That bagged so much traffic that five years later the "drug dump" still ranks No. 7 out of a total 92,600 Google hits that come up when you type in Santangelo's name. He says with a half-laugh that so far "it hasn't hurt me too bad," but he fears for the MySpacing, YouTubing, Facebooking masses -- the bloggers and vloggers (video bloggers) who fail to realize that there is no such thing as an eraser on the Internet. "I see people do that sort of thing now, and I think: 'Oh man, that could come back and bite you."'