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<abbr>Sid Parham´s last blog post..Who Do You Write For? Who Do You Read?</abbr>
I'm not so sure it isn't a problem, I just think is a subtle problem. Communities have always had to be on guard against the Confidence Man, and Melville's portrayal does tend to leave reader a bit more cautious than he would have otherwise been.
I enjoy Twitter for the conversations, that is why I am there.
<abbr>Bengt´s last blog post..btwendel: @BoulderCoaching wrote: We are like magnets - like attract like. :: No they don't. For magnets like poles repel - opposite poles attract.</abbr>
Thanks for your observations. Do you think communities can validate on behalf of the individual, before the individual gets the unencumbered opportunity?
Great post. Yes, I notice the bad advice too and it worries me. I think it's a catch-22: when you know more you can recognize the bad advice, when you know less you probably believe the bad advice. However, I always come back to the fact that you have to trust others to find their own way. Hopefully, we learn from all experiences whether they're are good or bad.
<abbr>Mary-Frances´s last blog post..Is the Internet Sucking the Life out of Fiction Writers?</abbr>
I think I'm just getting my snake oil nose tuned up. Like the article in Time this week that pull the cover off the detox scams like the pads people put on their feet. Sometimes it's hard to pitch two ideas in a post, but I do think that the participatory aspect of my first point helps to counter the problem of the bad advice. Thanks for your comment.
Admitting our mistakes is perhaps the surest way to building our credibility. I'm wondering what would have happened if I posted my two points in reverse order, as know I'm sensing it is the sharing that takes place as they are in this comment thread that protects and guards against bad advice.
Those hoarding keywords and searching for patterns of interest in Twitter will reap some benefit, I'm sure. However, if they forget the fact that behind every username there's a real person, with a real life and dear interests, they will miss the opportunity to really capitalize that potential.
<abbr>Luis Andrade´s last blog post..Total Man V1.0</abbr>
Thanks for your contribution to this topic. It's funny how having more time to observe brought this recognition to the forefront for me. It certainly doesn;t sway my behaviors, but I'm thinking along the lines of Brogan's upcoming book "Trust Agents" and how twitter is so built on trust. When I got active it was pretty easy for me to find solid advice. I wonder if I'd have the same experience if I were entering the game now.
As to your interesting people point: thank god! or I'd have shut down my account months ago.
Every time I have a parenting crisis I punch it into Twitter and am bombarded with great tips from experienced moms. But I really try to watch who I follow.
Maybe that will help. If we all un-follow the bad advice givers, it can't live on. Survival of the fittest.
I made this site last night - for anyone who is new to Twitter and just "doesn't get it."
http://www.twirgin.com
Feel free to cut that link out if you like - hope you don't mind, but I did want to share. I just love Twitter and am as fascinated with it as you are.
@mssinglemama
<abbr>Alaina (aka Ms. Single Mama)´s last blog post..The First Date</abbr>
Twitter offers great possibilities unless you let it run you over!
I have become somewhat of an active participant lately but I enjoy being an observer more--"the fly on the keyboard." It is fascinating and as in all things, one must sometimes learn "what not to do" rather than "what to do"...Twitterly speaking of course.
Thank you for sharing you insight!
<abbr>Henie´s last blog post..What’s so Funny?</abbr>