July 31, 2018

"Someone could screenshot your past tweets or embed them in a blog post. Just so you’re aware."

That's the sentence from "There’s no good reason to keep old tweets online. Here’s how to delete them" that I need to reverse engineer. Although the author of this WaPo piece, Abby Ohlheiser, is trying to talk people into fearing and destroying their Twitter archive, I care about my blog archive, and I don't want Twitter archive deleters to erode my archive and put blank spots where I've embedded tweets. Bloggers like me who love the archive should use screenshots. The links won't work in a screenshot of a tweet, but you can link to the tweet, and people can go to the tweet (if it's still up) and click on the links. Screenshots load a lot faster too.

An odd thing about Ohlheiser's article is that she begins by scaring readers about some people who suffered serious consequences because their archives had some old tweets that were — or seemed —anti-gay, pro-rape, pedophiliac, or racist. How many WaPo readers are worried about old tweets like that?
But by 2018, we should know that a tweet is simply too easy to take out of context — and there’s no reason to keep a full accounting of everything you’ve ever tweeted. So here’s a guide to getting rid of it.
Let me translate that for you: Our culture has become so insane that even you bland innocuous people ought to cower, because you can never be sure what might be used against you and when it is, you will be screwed. Maybe you once loved the freedom of expression, but it's 2018, and it's time for sprawling, pervasive anxiety. You need to be paranoid about the enemy that is your own old witty remarks and even your laughter (i.e., retweets) in response to somebody else's jokes. Because by 2018, nobody knows what a joke is anymore. It's the Era of That's Not Funny.

Ohlheiser says, "I deleted almost my entire Twitter archive about a year ago... I hesitated for months, because I was too attached to my years-old food observations and tweets about the local art scene in the small city I lived in after college." That could be a good setup for one of those New Yorker "Shouts and Murmurs" humor pieces. You once posed as empathic and beneficent attending the opening of an exhibition of photographs by and of transgender people. Today, that pose reads as condescending. Disrespectful. There's that old "food observation" about an ethnic restaurant that, by 2018 standards, smacks of racism. Years ago, you ate a taco. Today, you seem to have culturally appropriated it.

42 comments:

rehajm said...

This story is for relative unknowns like Larry Tribe and others with Trump Derangement Syndrome who used to be respected and will someday desperately want to hide their crazy.

Gahrie said...

For the Left, history begins anew each day. It must begin anew each day, because history shows how inept and evil Leftist ideology and actions have been and continue to be. Which are the same reasons that the Left rejects objective truth and reason.

The Drill SGT said...

Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) is the gift of the SJ warriors to society. For now, the greater impact is likely on moderates and conservatives, because it is the Left wielding the torches and pitchforks, however in the long run, the Left may suffer more. Why?

By virtue of our PC culture, conservatives are likely to have been more constrained in their old Tweets. The Left thought they had nothing to fear except now the Lefters are coming for Leftists...

Hollywood hardest hit

Gahrie said...

I can't wait until 2032 or so when the Left will be talking about how sane and compassionate Trump was compared to the present Republican.

Ralph L said...

For a while they've been scaring young people about college admissions people checking sextexting.

Can't have people punching holes in the ol' blog again.

She added an "h" so people wouldn't think she's your cousin.
Ancestry.com:
Olheiser Name Meaning: German: dialect form of Althäuser, a habitational name from the common place name Althausen or Althaus, or from Ahlhausen or Alhausen in Lower Saxony.

Henry said...

Here's another suggestion: Don't quote rap lyrics.

Gahrie said...

There is a reason why so many on the Left have no problem dealing with the idea that Russia is our enemy and Trump is somehow involved with them traitorously. They literally don't remember that for the last 100 years the Left has considered the USSR and Russia to be the good guys. they don't remember Ted Kennedy's letter to Andropov asking for help in getting elected and promising concessions to the USSR. They don't even remember the reset button and the "I'll be more flexible after the election" remark.


History begins anew every day.

Ignorance is Bliss said...

Years ago, you ate a taco.

Strictly speaking, it was a taco bowl.

David Begley said...

Question: Would America be a better place without the NYT or WaPo? Or, better yet, totally and completely replace the staff with non-journalists from flyover states. Put some people trained as truck drivers, nurses and firefighters in their place.

Guildofcannonballs said...

"Here's another suggestion: Don't quote rap lyrics."

"You must be going blind."

Ralph L said...

How much dirty laundry can one internet stand?

Ray - SoCal said...

The left online is overall a lot more vicious than the right.

Many on the right have this idea of turn the other cheek, you should not punch down, and you should not lower yourself to their level.

President Romney was unavailability for comment.

rhhardin said...

Retired people provide truth continuity.

Phil 314 said...

Maybe like the folks in “The Quiet Place” she should just go silent.

There monsters out there listening, waiting...

Truthavenger said...

The correct response to the perpetually outraged mob is not to delete your old tweets and blog posts.

The correct response is to tell them to "F*** off."

Phil 314 said...

Gahrie said
“For the Left, history begins anew each day”

That clearly applies to Trump supporters also.

(I’m not saying Gahrie is a Trump supporter.)

Gahrie said...

(I’m not saying Gahrie is a Trump supporter.)

I wasn't before the election. I considered him a dangerous demagogue. The only thing he had going for him was that he wasn't Hillary, who was personally corrupt and politically evil. Luckily, I live in California where my presidential vote doesn't matter, so I simply wrote my own name in.

That being said, I strongly approve of his presidency so far and definitely plan on voting for him in 2020.

Ray - SoCal said...

In many areas of Ca, it’s dangerous to say your a Trump supporter. It can ruin your career. Is this how the secret Jews felt with the threat of the inquisition?

When in public, I’m careful what I say with my family.

The violence that happened at the Trump rally’s in Ca terrifies / upsets / disgusts me. No matter how the msm hides what happened.

And the San Jose lawsuit moves forward!

The anti Trump / pc threats are not only online.

And online, I now hide my profile. And my public stuff with my real name, is non political.

And I refuse to answer telephone polls. You never know where the data will end up.

Political donations - no way. See what happened to donators to the anti gay marriage initiative.

Gahrie said...

In many areas of Ca, it’s dangerous to say your a Trump supporter

I'm a teacher. I don't eat in the staff lunchroom anymore.

gilbar said...
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gilbar said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
gilbar said...

Luckily, I live in California where my presidential vote doesn't matter, so I simply wrote my own name in.
how many Millions of Californians did NOT vote for Trump because they knew their vote didn't matter (except for the purely rhetorical 'popular vote')?

some news article said: "The 75.3 percent turnout of registered voters in the Nov. 8 election"

which raises the question: how many Millions of Californians don't even register?
from Anther new article: "About 14.6 million Californians cast ballots....Almost 20 million Californians were registered to vote California.... which currently has 39.2 million people"

GRW3 said...

Many years ago I was involved in a wrongful termination lawsuit (one of a half dozen or so defendants). I learned then not to put anything in a memo or email that I would not want to see in court. I keep that in mind for all this social media stuff.

Static Ping said...

I highly recommend that everyone delete all their Tweets, but mainly because Twitter has essentially no redeeming value whatsoever. Twitter is to intelligent discussion as porn is to motion pictures. Sure, you may get some deep philosophical insight between scenes of the interchangeable male talent eliciting faked orgasms from plastic surgery recipients, but no one is going to notice.

Seeing Red said...

Stored Twitter comments could be someone’s Picture of Dorian Grey. They preserve the rot in your soul. Or trying to maintain your status as a cool kid.

Sebastian said...

"Our culture has become so insane that even you bland innocuous people ought to cower, because you can never be sure what might be used against you and when it is, you will be screwed."

An oddly apolitical description of the actual situation. The insanity is a tool. The screwing has a purpose. It is about power.

"Our culture has become so thoroughly dominated by the aggressive left that all of you mildly or grossly deviant people ought to cower, because you can never be sure what new standards the left will use against you, and when it does, you and your family and your friends and your employer will be screwed."

"Because by 2018, nobody knows what a joke is anymore. It's the Era of That's Not Funny."

Well, we deep in the underground of doubeplusungood amateur philosophers still indulge in the occasional joke, knowing what it "is," even taking the risk of commenting on samizdat blogs like Althouse. Not having our memories erased just yet, we even recognize "That's Not Funny" as another form of prog coercion.

Gahrie said...

which raises the question: how many Millions of Californians don't even register?
from Anther new article: "About 14.6 million Californians cast ballots....Almost 20 million Californians were registered to vote California.... which currently has 39.2 million people"


I think you'll find that most of those 'missing voters" are non-citizens or underaged.

stlcdr said...

In other words, we had a weapon we used against our political and ideological opponents, and we discovered it can be turned on us!

Kate said...

I used tweetdelete on my archive 2 days ago. It's not really about being afraid. I'm pretty tame. It's that social media is changing. When Kat McKinley, the "sweetest woman on twitter" (and she is), was suspended it was a wake-up call. The battle for free speech has gotten darker. The delete is a loin-girding.

chuck said...

I'm reminded of the show trials in the days of Stalin. Past actions, the notes of ambitious underlings, remembered snippets of conversations, and invented crimes could all be used to dispose of whomever Stalin wanted deposed. Anyone could be dragged off screaming and executed in one of those special rooms with the sloping concrete floors designed for washing away the detritus of execution. Welcome to the new days of socialism, just like the old days.

reader said...

The only thing I use Twitter for is to follow CAL_FIRE. We had three fires last week and it is the best way to get a heads up.

FullMoon said...

".....or seemed —anti-gay, pro-rape, pedophiliac, or racist. How many WaPo readers are worried about old tweets like that?

But by 2018, we should know that a tweet is simply too easy to take out of context — "

There is the reason for the column. Couple of their guys tweeting about sex with kids got fired. Spin is it was taken out of context and just kidding.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

@OlheiserMustFall

Lovernios said...

In 1984 you had Big Brother watching, listening, to everything you did or said.

In 2018 you have millions of Little Brothers (and Sisters) watching, listening to everything to did or said.

Bill Peschel said...

I've been thinking about deleting my Twitter account completely. Yesterday, a college administrator congratulated a friend of his for winning the nomination (for Georgia governor I think).

Because the candidate was GOP, the admin was bombarded on Twitter for supporting a racist, sexist, etc.etc.etc.

Two days later, he apologized and vowed to do better.

He had to betray his childhood friend in the face of the mob.

My stuff is very innocuous, but I've become so disgusted with Twitter that I'd rather walk away. I can blog on my own websites anyway.

I'm grateful I don't work for a newspaper anymore, but as a self-published author, I'm still vulnerable if anyone wanted to crap in my nest.

Christopher said...

"Finding old tweets, edgy jokes or offensive remarks to try to ruin someone’s career has also become a favorite tool of the pro-Trump Internet, in part because it sometimes works"

The *only* reason you're beginning to see pieces like this from the institutional left is that some on the right stopped being doormats, using the same tactic that has been used against us for *years.*

At this point I'll just point and laugh.

JAORE said...

I'll never run for office. For one thing the public rejection might bruise my ego.

But if I ever change that decision, here is a money making tip. Offer to do oppo-research on me for a low price. My past (and to a lesser degree my present) is replete with inappropriate humor (sez you!).

Easy pay day.

Rabel said...

"There’s no good reason to keep old tweets online. Here’s how to delete them."

That headline is printed directly under the Post's gnomic* tagline "Democracy Dies In Darkness."

*h/t to Althouse for expanding my vocabulary.

mikeski said...

"Show me the man. I'll find you the Tweet."

--Beria

Jeff Brokaw said...

Personally I find the effort people go to, to search somebody’s archives for specific keywords in order to embarrass or even destroy them, to be a bigger problem than the tweets themselves.

I’m fine with with mild criticism of people’s random thoughts expressed on Twitter from like 8 years ago, if we really think that is accomplishing something - which is highly doubtful - but let’s not pretend that the act of searching somebody’s archives for specific SJW trigger words expressly to embarrass them publicly, or even destroy their lives, is not also problematic.

Bob said...

Many people don't know that Matt Drudge routinely deletes his Tweets. He'll post something profound, interesting, shocking or pertinent to the day's events - - and will delete it within a day or so.

rcocean said...

i refuse to delete my tweets. Someone might read them some day.

Anyway, wasn't it Wellington who said "Publish and be Damned", when threatened over indiscreet letters?

Well that's my attitude.

OTOH, I've never understood the craze for making obnoxious Twitter comments. But then I didn't grow up messaging.