Lenas wrote:
Coro:
It's funny that after everything you've said about opinions not mattering, you still write your posts like yours do.
You're mistakenly conflating two different scopes. It is not unreasonable for Coro to assume that the Glade population would allow his comments some amount of weight. You have conferred such in the past, and probably will in the future. It would be unreasonable for Coro to assume that the Twitter population would allow his comments any weight. The populations differ by orders of magnitude, and he has no reputational backing in the Twitter venue.
Perhaps it was a bit unfair to state "there are no personal opinions on Twitter" from a clarity perspective. Obviously, people vomit personal opinions all over Twitter, so from that standpoint, certainly, there are personal opinions on Twitter. In the old days (and you'll forgive me, I hope, for regressing into a tale of the golden age of the Internet) when personal opinions were exchanged in a public venue, or at least as public as a venue could be in those days, everyone was very careful to disassociate themselves and their opinions from any affiliations, such as employer or volunteer organization or whatever, that could be potentially harmed. In fact, you may have seen some of the artifacts of this time, such as "#include <disclaimer.h>" or "#include <std/disclaimer.h>". The standard disclaimer was along the lines of "All opinions expressed are solely personal, and are not to be mistaken in any way for those held by my employer/volunteer organization/whatever." and so on and so forth for as much verbiage as it took to adequately distance yourself from any repercussions.
Let us examine reputation. Your perceived reputation is the sum total of what people know about you. Your actual reputation is the sum total of what people can know about you. There's an important distinction there. Remember when you posted "I sure do enjoy rapin' trannies"[1]? No? Well Google does, and it's more than happy to tell both your best friend and your worst enemy. How far will they disseminate this information? As it makes the rounds, your perceived reputation is modified in relation to your actual reputation.
Today, in social media, there is no separation of private and public persona, except insofar as you can refrain from leaking your private persona into your public one. Every wife-beater is aware, for instance, that they don't want that proclivity to become public. The average person, generally not being a wife-beater or anything else egregiously anti-social, doesn't have a yardstick against which to measure what they should or should not make public. The average person also cannot mentally encompass the speed of proliferation of the Internet, so they reason that since there's nothing horrendously wrong with them, and they have friends that don't constantly call them retarded, that the Internet is pretty much the same way. Now, most of the time, nobody gets the comeuppance that makes them go hang themselves in a closet for the amusement of 4chan. And that's obscurity working in their favor. But every so often, for whatever reason, somebody hits the wall. Twitter is "on-record". It's a broadcast. There are no mulligans, there are no backsies. There are only retractions, apologies, and hoping somebody else does something stupider so that you can go out in public again.
[1] Obviously, no one has posted this, and the "you" in this sentence is the rhetorical "you", not any specific "you".