Doing the Right Thing -- 5 Tech Pitfalls

If you're in school or you're an adult in the working world, ignore them at your own peril.

1. Illegal Downloading
The dilemma: You just gotta get that song, that TV show, that movie, whatever -- but you don't want to dip into your hard-earned beer fund.
The pitfall: You could hit Pandora for a quick listen, or Hulu for a free watch, but there's nothing like an all-expenses-paid trip to Torrentland, where you might guzzle down a few gigs and share your collection of rare Muppets records with like-minded enthusiasts. "There's a sense by many [folks] that they're little fish in a big sea and so won't get caught," says James, citing the findings of her study. "Despite the fact that it's illegal, it's what youth culture endorses."
The penalty: Well, kiddo, hate to break it to you, but any time you take a product without paying for it, you're stealing. Unfortunately, it doesn't matter what philosophical argument you make as the law has recently come down squarely on the side of content owners. Just ask the woman who has to pay $1.9 million for downloading just 24 songs. Or the gods of file-sharing themselves, the owners of Pirate Bay, who were sentenced to a year in the pokey and a $3.54 million fine. Next time the siren call of free tunes beckons, remember that you could quite easily end up in massive, crippling debt for life.

The dilemma: The clock is ticking and your research paper on 19th-century Welsh farming techniques is nearly due, but you just don't feel like buckling down for an all-nighter. (Same goes for older bloggers and tweeters snatching images that don't belong to them and 'forgetting' to add a credit.)
The pitfall: Sites like Cramster and Course Hero are the modern equivalents of term-paper services that once were advertised in the back of magazines (this is our polite way to hint this is an updated form of cheating). And we don't have to point out that cutting and pasting Wikipedia entries is problematic both because it's so error-ridden, and because you're taking others' ideas and claiming them as your own. "Plagiarism is a huge problem. No one [in the study] admitted to us that they had done it," James says. "But other studies [show] that plagiarism and cheating is on the rise. Very few, if any, students talk about the importance of credit for the original writer of materials."
The penalty: The irony of the digital age is that just as it has become incredibly easy to cheat, it has become even easier to detect. Teachers today have a pretty effective arsenal of tools at their disposal for detecting plagiarism -- from online services, to downloadable software that scans the Web, to perusing those cheating sites themselves. In high school, plagiarism usually gets you an F for the class, and, in college, you can get the boot after just the first offense.

The dilemma: Some teachers are not only soul-crushingly boring, but needlessly harsh graders. And some bosses just never seem to give an encouraging word, and, let's face it, they're jerks to boot. It is your personal mission to save future students and employees from your fate.
The pitfall: The temptation to slam a teacher or employer is coupled with a digital world that has made it incredibly easy to sound off on social networking sites, especially with dedicated teacher-rating services (and their working-world equivalent, boss-rating services). In one of James's studies, she noted, "There were always a handful of [folks] who felt like the Internet is a different place and you can do whatever you want -- that's what it's for and if people don't like it, they just have to deal." The thing about public outbursts, though, is that they're public. With the Internet, they're not only spread around the world instantly, but they'll also likely exist forever. Add that to the fact that Internet anonymity is really a myth, and suddenly your little Facebook crack about Mr. Harrison's hairy crack can have devastating consequences.
The penalty: If you're lucky, your jibe about a teacher or boss might just end with an embarrassing public apology and the torture of having to look that authority figure in the eye every day. If you're unlucky, you could end up in court fighting off a libel case, like the couple sued by a dentist over a negative Yelp review, or the blogger who was publicly identified by Google after calling an acquaintance a "skank." Either way, it isn't pretty. If you must comment online, be fair, be truthful, and don't get personal.

The dilemma: Sometimes, your idea of having fun means doing things that are against the rules. Like when you drunk-Sharpied your roommate, or did body shots off of a complete (-ly attractive) stranger. Naturally, you have to record these things for posterity's sake and share them with interested parties (i.e., the entire world).
The pitfall: The Internet, as we've said a million times before, is instant, everywhere, and eternal. "I think it's one of the most common issues that students face," says James, "and a surprising number do nothing to adjust their privacy settings -- or change their behavior." So that photo of you puking off a balcony that you posted to Facebook is just a few mouse-clicks away from being a featured Digg photo waiting to be enjoyed by millions across the globe, including your peers, colleagues, teachers, newscasters, bosses, and romantic partners. You see where this is going?
The penalty: Expulsion. Loss of employment. Arrest. Irreparably damaged relationships. Being the butt of your social circle's jokes. We don't have enough space the damage done by careless postings, but to name a couple recent ones: perpetually gross oversharers, and these suspended doctors and nurses.

5. Using Your Phone in Class or Meetings
The dilemma: Something just popped into your noggin so deeply, hilariously, awesomely interesting that it must be communicated to a friend. Now. Only, you're in chemistry class or a sales meeting.
The pitfall: Sure, we'll grant that blind-texting is an admirable feat, as is learning how to breach your school or employer's firewall to let IMs and Facebook through. But, unless you're passing along the cure to cancer, we're pretty sure your deep thoughts can wait till after you get out of work or class.
The penalty: The debate in schools over kids' right to possess cell phones still rages on, but it's kind of beside the point. Get caught texting or, worse, taking a call, and you're either going to lose your phone, get detention, be suspended, or -- at the very least -- get an ass-chewing. From a more practical side, you'll also get lower grades. At work, you might not get fired, but do it enough and you may well just miss that important piece of info that helps you work better and advance in the company. Additionally, we can all agree that someone 'tip-tapping' or gabbing away while the rest of us feign attention is downright annoying. So go ahead, send that ROFL text now, and look forward to a future manning the deep fryer.
Illustrations by Camille Altay.
Facebook Crime and Punishment
Blackmail
Sending any personal info or incriminating pictures to someone on Facebook is a huge mistake for many reasons. One of the worst possible outcomes is getting blackmailed for money, sex, or, well, anything these sickos dream up. Really, whether they're using a fake profile or not, it's a horrible idea. Read up on the story of an 18-year-old who blackmailed 31 male classmates after he posed as a girl and asked for nude pictures. That's lesson enough.
Impostors
Sure, it can be harmless to impersonate a celeb online or create a fake profile for a movie character. But seriously, there's a definite line you shouldn't cross when pretending to be someone else and it can lead to dire consequences for you. Maybe it's not as extreme as the Moroccan man who was jailed for 43 days after creating a fake Facebook profile of a prince, but you never know. Just steer clear of it.
Self-Incrimination
Do we really have to explain this? Just look up the shoplifter who posed with her stolen merchandise, the many photos of drunk underage teens, and, most recently, the album featuring a couple who killed and ate an endangered iguana in the Bahamas.
Suicide
Social networking sites has been blamed for a lot of things, fairly and unfairly, but in our opinion, the worst offense has been their indirect involvement in suicides. Obviously, there are a lot of factors responsible in each case, but there does seem to be links between social networking and a rash of suicides, and obviously tehre's the case tragic of Megan Meier, who killed herself after a classmate's mom impersonated a teen boy and harassed her over Myspace.
Murder
We've reported on numerous incidents of people getting in trouble because of their online behavior. Now, people are becoming victims because of what they're doing on the Web too. In England, a man was convicted of murdering his estranged wife after she changed her relationship status to "single." So, be careful of who can see your profile and what you're doing, no matter how harmless it seems.
Nigerian Scammers
Oh, you thought this only happened via poorly worded emails, right? WRONG. Once people got wise to their old ways, these con men are turning to social networking sites for new targets. This time, they're hacking into people's accounts and impersonating them to ask for money, usually with some weird sob story. You can check out a transcript of one of these conversations here.
Cooperation
Even if the law isn't on a case, a victim, his friends, or empathetic strangers might be. Since it's easy to get word out for anything online, people are using blogs, forums, and social networking sites to help track down criminals. In one such case, a vehicle thief was tracked down by a bunch of anonymous car enthusiasts after the victim posted his story on a forum. In the end, they identified the guy through his Facebook profile.
Self-Incrimination
Do we really have to explain this? Just look up the shoplifter who posed with her stolen merchandise, the many photos of drunk underage teens, and, most recently, the album featuring a couple who killed and ate an endangered iguana in the Bahamas.






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Comments
96
Subscribe to commentsHeartbreak KidSep 24th 2009 12:40PM
If you're stupid enough to post negative comments about people you know on your Facebook, MySpace and whatever, why wouldn't you think they see it when everybody brags, "Hey, are you on Facebook? I am....my name is .........". idiots...........
lilpooh118Sep 24th 2009 12:48PM
LOL the comments on this were about as funny as the article.Yea Yea First Amendment Blah blah. That line is just a mythical defense stupid people use to defend a stupid comment. Obviously if u do something to someone good or bad it will come around, You don't need the goverment to punish you. Karma will get you in its own sweet time. Like when some crayon eater gets the promotion that you are clearly more qualified for. The point of the article people should take away is think about what u are doing or saying on the internet. No maybe you won't get sued or if you did you could sue back. But there are other ways Karma can get you and when she does. I'll bet she is laughing.
RENAESep 24th 2009 12:54PM
I do believe we have the right to freedom of
speech. But our world is changing so fast and much. There are new laws passed everyday that we the people are not informed
of. And the goverment has so much more control of things around us . I think we have right to voice our thought . But we don't have right to personally set out to hurt anyone. We
need to stop and think how we would feel
if someone set out to hurt our personality and who we are. Specially when thay do not know who we really are and how we live.
It is not our right to jugde people for weather there right or wrong. And I agree we need to respect each other in the way we conment on
any subject. The biggist problem I can see is
the bad language that get used by people who make comments on any subject. To me
you should be able totalk without being defensive. We should all think before we speck. Because words can hurt more then sometimes action.
SOS (Sick of Subs)Sep 24th 2009 1:13PM
Read this article again. All it's saying is to use common sense when using the Internet. I have posted on lots of blog boards and it amazes me as to how much of the population thinks it's okay to degrade someone with their comments.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but please try to word your comments in a way that is not degrading.
Whenever I see a comment in which someone rants; I feel sorry that they are unable to get their point across in an intelligent manner.
Blogging can be fun. Why post something that you wouldn't want your mother to read.
tobySep 24th 2009 1:14PM
i pay for the internet. what i do on your net is your problem..put al gore in jail he clams he started it. down loads are part of the deal .you pay for the downloads i;ll pay for you to be my server..
deliverymansSep 29th 2009 5:43PM
My thoughts on what some have posted were outrages before they read the whole post. You don't just read one post, and move on to your comments if what you are commenting on, is what a person posted. Please read twice before getting your underwear in bunch. This seems like noone is aloud to comment on the article, they comment on the other comments. This isn't a debate, it is your comment about the article, blog, or whatever you want to call it.
Don't just spam other people for their posts. Please remember Freedom in the US is not Free, you have to pay for it. That is why we pay congress members to sit around thinking of new rules, and other people think of ways to avoid the high paid thoughts of those congress members... For every rule there is a flaw. or a different view, that's what makes us people. This article seems to me to be an advisory, that if you participate in those types of activities, you may have to deal with the pitfalls, even though you pay for your connection, and you should be able to say whatever you want without retaliation, the US being a finger-pointing country, you now have more laws, or enjoy the pitfalls.
aadcock221Sep 24th 2009 1:53PM
Im sorry, but to hear your comments makes me believe that we are reading two completely different articles. Not once in this article did I detect even the slightest insinuation at the idea that we cannot freely express our ideas and opinions. It merely "suggested" that perhaps the internet, (something hopelessly eternal and completely relative to whatever ignoramous just happens to run across it), is not the best place to be putting something you more than likely will regret posting in a few years time. Prehaps you should consider reading the entirety of the article before you jump to extremes about what its underlying message is...
Shoes and DirtSep 24th 2009 2:04PM
This is so stupid.
Honestly, this whole "THE INTERNET IS SERIOUS BUSINESS" scare-tactic has been tried thousands of times. If we don't heed it now, chances are we aren't ever going to.
There are people who are capable of texting during lectures, posting blogs of their opinion on their coworkers, professors, or employers, and other such things listed without getting caught. The technique is called common sense.
I won't ever feel bad or awkward for posting my opinion - I have every right to say exactly what I think. If someone takes offense to it, that isn't my problem. I'd love to see the day I get fired or suspended from school for posting in my own blog or forum I always frequent. If they can be upset because they were insulted, I can equally upset because they were searching through my online history to find the comments.
Everyone is so overly sensitive about everything. It's seriously getting annoying.
over againSep 24th 2009 2:08PM
Freedom of speech doesn't seem to mean what it used to..... but we are civil beings and we should watch how we say, what we want to say without the vulgar language and other various crap we should keep to our selves. As for racism, I really don't know what nationality I am, I have so many backgrounds in my family, Im am a mixed spice! A little salt, pepper, onion powder, garlic, oregano, basil, parsley, cilantro, dill, you get my point, I doesn't matter. What matters is who we make ourselves into not who our parents or grandparents are or where they came from or what they went through.... We are all human, we should all act as though we are all human and stop the blame game. So people in the past made mistakes, people in the future will too. Just do your best to survive in an equally harsh world. Next time you walk past someone you don't know, smile damn it and be happy you are alive!
Phsyco MidgetSep 24th 2009 2:19PM
Freedom of speech doesn't mean that posting your "newly ex-best friend is a skank whore" is okay =] High Schoolers today love drama and starting it Via facebook is a growing trend, and from what I've seen, it hurts.
We can say what we want, but do we really want to hurt people in the process?
debjmSep 24th 2009 2:51PM
I love articles like this, just because the responding posts are so darned cute. For everyone out there who is determined to say what he or she wants: Forget about all the warnings of lawsuits, employment termination, classroom repercussions for a moment. Forget about the fact that there are indeed legal avenues to counter slander and libel, forget about the possibility that your remarks may hurt another person or adversely affect his or her life (after all, that's your goal, right?). Think instead about the one person you're indisputably hurting with your words: YOU. You may have the right, in the U.S. at least, to express your opinion of your teacher, your boss, or your ex-spouse, whatever, but remember that the rest of us have the right, based on your comments, to form an opinion of you.
Profane and vulgar comments reflect one's limited vocabulary. Ill-written and misspelled comments reflect one's lack of education. Comments intended to malign another person or expose that person's shortcomings, whether the comments are truthful or not, reflect one's lack of self-control, integrity, discretion, or self-respect. The character of one's comments is a clear window into one's...character. When you reveal yourself to be a belligerent, uneducated, expletive-prone gossip on the Internet, you invite the entire world to sit in judgment of YOU.
Concerning illegal downloads -- that's stealing. Rationalize all you like, but a person who steals music or other protected material is a thief.
CarmargerSep 24th 2009 2:55PM
To: jrakjohn 7:52AM on 9-24-2009 - I AGREE WITH YOU MOST DEFINITELY ON POINT #4. FREE SPEECH APPEARS TO BE AMONG THE MANY DISAPPEARING THINGS THAT AMERICANS HAVE ALWAYS BEEN ABLE TO RETAIN. NOW, SUDDENLY, WE ARE BEING DEPRIVED OF THE MOST BASIC AND SIMPLE THINGS IN LIFE BECAUSE THE CURRENT LAWMAKERS SEEM TO BE MAKING SURE OF IT - FROM FREEDOM OF SPEECH TO THE TAXATION OF SODA. THE CURRENT AMERICAN GOVERNMENT, AND WHAT IT IS FLEXING ITS LAWMAKING MUSCLES TO DO, IS NOTHING SHORT OF PITIFUL. FORTUNATELY, THEY WILL LIVE TO SEE THEIR STUPIDITY IN FOUR YEARS.
TeeSep 24th 2009 3:57PM
What is seemingly hysterical is that most seem like they are not aware of common respect. Everyone's rights end where someone else's begin, just know that when you disrepect; that the same can fall upon you. It does not take rocket science to know that what you do to others will happen to you, hence (Karma). Take a moment, breath, and exhale before responding to the less educated comments, all the while knowing that the thought process is very limited when someone is not taught or self taught how to express what is on their mind and it is a very simple process when one cares how they are looked upon by their peers. Respect comes from those who respect self, making it easy to respect others, after all, no one likes it complex.
JenniferSep 24th 2009 6:09PM
Let's see...no freedom of speech unless you are politically correct. It seems to me that if you're Christian then there is no freedom of speech. We HAVE to accept everyone else's point of view but yet we are not allowed to state ours. That is not right. Ok...I'm ready for the loads of emails that will state that I'm absolutely wrong. Fine. I can take it. Let's just remember that everyone has the right to voice their opinions.
JodiSep 24th 2009 8:08PM
You are absolutely correct, we all have the right to free speech, and we use it, sometimes to our detriment. However, when you are using your free speech right to libel someone, or to cause harm to another person's reputation or job, then they have rights also, which just like your right to free speech, they have an inalienable right to defend themselves against your libel. These inalienable rights that we all have, were given to us in a time when people behaved in a more civil manner toward their fellow man and when it was acceptable to have and even use manners and to be kind to others. The Internet gives us all anonymity to be brave, bold, or even disrespectful and vicious to others. This article is addressing things that are inapprorpiate to do, even on the Internet. It says nothing about taking away anyone's right to free speech.
moritheilOct 18th 2009 1:59AM
I am dismayed to see Switched perpetuate the common misconception that copyright violations are identical to theft. Legally and conceptually, violation of intellectual property rights has always been a very different thing from theft. This oversimplification promotes ignorance and misunderstanding.