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Annotated Bibliography

Published on Sep 23, 2018

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Annotated Bibliography

By. Katie Linnenkamp 
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Your social media can be used for job applications, college scholarships, and many other things. All without your knowledge (if you d read the terms and conditions).

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Companies have the right to check your Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and all of your social media sights.

All of your rights to your privacy are stated in the terms and conditions you agree to when you get the app.

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Keeping your information private isn’t just about your own choices. It’s about your friends’ choices, too. Results from a study of a now-defunct social media site show that the inhabitants of the digital age may need to stop and think about just how much they control their personal information, and where the boundaries of their privacy are.

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When someone joins a social network, the first order of business is, of course, to find friends. To aid the process, many apps offer to import contact lists from someone’s phone or e-mail or Facebook, to find matches with people already in the network.

An athlete’s athleticism on the field will get them recognized and perhaps earn a college offer. However, an athlete's character and actions off the field—and on social media—also can get them recognized, but for the wrong reasons. There are many cases of high school athlete's losing their college scholarships to stupid posts on social media. Nowadays stuff like that happening is not a rare occurrence.

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In Conclusion, social media should not be used for inappropriate reasons and instead, use it to spread positive messages to the people that are looking on and save yourself the embarrassment of losing one of the most important things in a high schoolers career.

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The End

 
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