When Al Gore help pass the Information Infrastructure and Technology Act of 1992, online identity and the way we perceive ourselves and others via the Internet was probably the last thing on his mind. But Mr. Gore did see the possibilities in the Internet and with this an entire new world was created, giving people the ability to be who or whatever their hearts desired.
Cambridge, Massachusetts 2004. Four Harvard College students feel that it is time to create a social network that does not include avatars and fake names, but real names, real people, and real interaction. So with that Mark Zuckerberg, Chris Hughes, Dustin Moskovitz, and Eduardo Saverin created Facebook, the most popular social networking site that has more than 500 million users.
With the creation of Facebook and MySpace, the Internet became a playground for the imagination and created the age of Online Identity. What is Online Identity you ask. An online identity is an identity that an Internet user creates for themselves on different websites and social networking sites. These identities allow us to become our dreams and give us an outlet for everything we cannot say in our normal everyday lives. It is in a way an alternate life that we can choose to lead and live or simply have fun with. But what are the negatives to online identity?
Many feel that who they are online is directly related to who they are in their everyday lives. But according to Jolie O’Dell article Facebook feeds narcissism, survey says, Facebook “offers a gateway for hundreds of shallow relationships and emotionally detached communication.” Along with lack of communication and shallow relationships, the article also states that because of sites like Facebook and MySpace many users are showing narcissistic behavior on their profiles.
So the question is are our online identities mirrors of our reality selves, or are they reflections of our hidden self-inflamed egos? You as the reader can decide for yourselves.
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