Privacy and Private Parts

Just between you and me, this post is about privacy.

 

Naked Long Ago

I once got in a bit of trouble for showing a naked picture of myself to someone.  We had a conversation about my burn scars and how I had had them so long I didn’t really remember what I looked like without them.  Later I came across a long ago photo, taken in high school, of me about to go skinny dipping by jumping off a boat into the water.  It was the last photo I remember that showed my body with no scars. Since I was facing away from the camera and my wiener wasn’t showing I thought it would be no big deal to show it to this person.  I was wrong.  And that was just a single printed image, not a digital image that is traveling around the world at a million miles a second.

Naked Now

Imagine being Prince Harry at a party in Vegas?  That was a bit more exposure than he wanted, that’s for sure.  Even his sister-in-law, the Duchess of Cambridge, sunbathing miles out in the middle of nowhere, got photographed with her boobies exposed.  Luckily for both of them the public had their fun and then left it alone.  Seeing Harry’s fella and Kates bosom is trivial and inconsequential.  

But think about the rape case in Ohio that just was at trial this past week.  If it weren’t for social media in images and words, the rape would likely never have been found out and the victim would not have had justice done.  Two young men were found guilty in large part due to twitter, youtube and other social media engagements that allowed a trail of evidence and memory to be fitted together.  Social media helped find the truth.  

The Middle of Nowhere is Everywhere

Social media imagery is everywhere.  If you do something bad, especially in a group, there is a very good chance it will be exposed beyond the borders of the party or event and you will be found out, and that is good.  But if you do something good and innocent, like skinny dipping, there is also a chance of being exposed well beyond the borders of the swimming hole and that might be bad.

Morals of the story? 1. Be careful with your image, naked or otherwise. 2. Use the images you have to make things better when you can.

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Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman

Quote by Pete Cashmore, Founder of Mashable.com

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