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- W2992956673 abstract "The Internet is used by 30.2% of the people in the world and up to 78.2% of the United States (US) population (Internet Users in North America, 2011; US Census Bureau, 2011). Facebook is the most visited website in the world (Ionescu, 2010), among other social network sites like MySpace, Twitter, and Live Journal. Rehabilitation counselor educators (RCE) and rehabilitation counselors (RC) must therefore be aware of how social networking affects their work with students and consumers and consider social networking in relation to the Code of Professional Ethics for Rehabilitation Counselors (Commission on Rehabilitation Counselor Certification [CRCC], 2010). This article defines social networking and seeks to address a climate of ethical uncertainty by proposing the use of an ethical decision making model for the many unique dilemmas arising for RCEs and RCs. Social Networking Defined Social networking may be defined as a phenomenon through which Internet users build virtual communities based on common interests, activities, and established friendships. Social networking offers a way to establish or maintain relationships while also offering means for self-expression (Lenhart, Purcell, Smith, & Zickuhr, 2010). There are hundreds of millions of users worldwide, including students, faculty, RCs, and consumers of rehabilitation counseling services. Boyd and Ellison (2007) have defined social network sites as web-based services that allow individuals to ... construct a public or semi-public profile within a bounded system (p. 211), to choose who may access this profile, and to view the profiles of others and have others view their profiles within this bounded system. Social network sites are unique in that enable users to articulate and make visible their social (boyd & Ellison, 2007, p. 211). Although some people use social network sites to meet new people, most use social networks for communication with extended groups of friends. A typical social network user shares information about his or her age, interests, location, school, and work, with videos, photos, and other information of interest to friends. Social network sites like Twitter also offer an opportunity to indicate where a person is precisely, how the person feels, and what the person is doing or has recently done (boyd & Ellison, 2007). Nine out of ten Internet users accessed social network sites in 2010 (comScore, 2011). These Internet users spent, on average, 4 hours monthly on social networking sites, with Facebook being accessed 1 out of every 8 minutes (comScore, 2011). Some sites (e.g., Friendster, LinkedIn) allow anyone to view members' information posted to the site, while other sites, like Facebook or Google+, allow anyone who is part of the Facebook network to see the user's profile, unless privacy settings are turned on. Generally, if users allow others to view their profiles, they are called Friends, meaning a person connected via the social network site, although not necessarily a person with whom one would spend significant time offline. In many cases, if two people are Friends, the social network allows one to view the other's profile as well as all of his or her Friends' profiles. On some sites, a person must agree to be added as a Friend, but this is not the ease on all social network sites. Friends can leave comments or send private messages to the person who possesses the individual social network profile (boyd & Ellison, 2007). Social Networking is the Norm Social media users in their teens often use their online presence as an extension of their personalities, interacting mostly with people they already know outside of the Internet (Livingstone, 2008). Generation Y, or those born after 1978, are more likely to use the Internet for entertainment purposes, while Generation X, born between 1966 and 1978, have been leading the pack in practical uses of the Internet, like finance, information gathering and telecommuting (Zickuhr, 2010). …" @default.
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- W2992956673 date "2013-07-01" @default.
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- W2992956673 title "Ethical decision making applied to social networking" @default.
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