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Army Lifts Social Media Ban
- Comments: (3)
- Published June 12th, 2009 in Ethics aka Right and Wrong, In the News, New Media & Politics, New Media and The Law, Social Networking, Technology, Why new media?
Chalk this one up as a victory for the brave men and women around the country that are helping to keep our country completely safe and sound. Up until this point, due to security concerns and privacy worries by ol’ Uncle Sam, the U.S. Army had blocked the vast majority of all social media and Web 2.0 sites on all of their bases. That meant, for our soldiers, they had no access to Flickr, Twitter, Facebook, Myspace or Vimeo…the sites that, if we’re honest, steal a great deal of our time on a daily basis.
The good news is that now that the U.S. Army has re-evaluated their stance on it, they’ve decided to lift the social media ban at certain U.S. bases that have most likely passed through the checklists and red tape to make it happen. According to reports:
“The order was made to “leverage social media sites as a medium to allow soldiers to ‘tell the Army story’ and to facilitate the dissemination of strategic, unclassified information,” the order states. Even before this order, a number of official U.S. Army social media pages were set up on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Flickr, intended to promote soldiers’ stories to civilians…”
Great news for all the men and women that have been wanting to actually continue their online lives while serving our country. Apparently this order is not going to work on all Army bases, as some have classified information that they can’t risk getting out, but eventually they have plans to allow this type of thing on all bases. We’ll see when and if that happens, but the bigger news is just that social media has had this kind of impact, on this broad of a scale. 10 years ago, would anyone have believed the U.S. Army would have a Facebook page? Nope.
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Ten years ago, could anyone have even explained Facebook to anyone, much less why anyone would want to use it?
haha true! There was no facebook 10 years ago, or if it did I didn’t know of it.
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