Hartford Courant

Facebook posts lead to host of problems

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter @askingamy Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

DearReader­s: Every year during this time I step away from my column to work on other creative projects. I hope you enjoy these “Best Of” Q&A from 10 years ago. Today’s topic is: “Friending.”

I’ll be back with fresh Q&A next week.

DearAmy: More than seven months have passed since my boyfriend of almost a year and I broke up. Since that time, he has dated two other women. He has been with his current girlfriend for several months.

I’m also seeing someone. I understand a certain amount of trash-talking occurs after a breakup, but I feel he has been inappropri­ate, and I’m not sure how to handle it.

I’ve refrained from airing what I disliked about our relationsh­ip.

He, on the other hand, has talked to my current boyfriend about why he shouldn’t date me and recently publicly bashed me on his Facebook page.

This includes calling me a “constant embarrassm­ent,” mentioning a much-regretted trip to the hospital due to an alcohol overdose (which happened a long time ago).

He is publicly exaggerati­ng events from my past. I sent him a cordial message expressing how this post has hurt my feelings, and he hasn’t responded or taken action to delete this very public post. What should I do?

— Facebooked

DearFacebo­oked: I shared your query with Nicky Colaco, a representa­tive of Facebook, who noted that Facebook’s terms of service specify that users should not post offensive or malicious content.

“The goal of these policies is to strike a very delicate balance between giving people the freedom to express their opinions and viewpoints, even those that may be controvers­ial to some, and respecting the rights and feelings of others,” Colaco wrote.

“We encourage people to let us know when they see something they think might violate our standards. Our team of investigat­ors reviews and takes action on reported content according to our policies.”

Your boyfriend’s postings qualify as malicious, in my view. You can report this by clicking the “Report” button on the Facebook page, block him on Facebook and have no further contact with him.

DearAmy: I would like some advice about how to let friends and family know that I would not like any pictures of my family posted on Facebook or any other social networking site. What the heck is the best way to do this without sounding like a freak?

— Concerned

DearConcer­ned: I remember back at the dawn of Facebook (say, two or three years ago) when I advocated in this space for the concept of “permission” regarding the posting of photos. Oh, how young and naive I was.

Now that I’ve been active Facebook both personally and profession­ally, I know better.

By all means, ask people in your circle not to post photos of your family on social networking sites.

The people in your personal circle of actual “friends” may go to great lengths to respect your wishes, but then there are your kids’ friends; their teammates; their teammates’ moms and their teammate’s mom’s sisterin-law, Brenda, who took some pictures of the kids during their last game and has posted and “tagged” all the children in the photos.

Join these social networking sites yourself. Then you can attempt to control them by removing “tags” or asking people to pull photos down. You have the right to do this.

DearAmy: I read the letter from “Helpful Grandma,” the grandparen­t whose grandchild­ren posted questionab­le photos on Facebook.

I remembered my grandmothe­r’s advice: If I made a funny face or stuck my tongue out, she told me that if I kept it up, my face would freeze that way — forever. This was decades before the internet existed. Now that we have Facebook, it turns out she was right! How prophetic.

— Prophetic Wisdom

DearProphe­tic: Facebook has been around long enough now that I think we’re starting to see a cohort of early adopters who are confrontin­g evidence of their young foolishnes­s. And how much do we hate to say, “We told you so”? (Not very much.)

Copyright 2021 by Amy Dickinson

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