(link to the complete article)With networking websites such as Facebook and MySpace expanding expedientially, the rise of cyber friendships has brought with it a new set of social niceties, conventions and potential embarrassments.
Such sites are designed to set up an online network of friends to keep in touch and to exchange gossip but, as in all social situations, the results can be fraught. How can you separate friends from mere online acquaintances? How do you tell someone that you don’t want to be their friend? What do you do when you discover that you suddenly have countless “friends” whom you either don’t know or don’t like?
Maybe I am taking the whole friends list thing too seriously. I've never been on MySpace or FaceBook or any of the others, so maybe it really is about quantity not quality. Although, I think I would prefer to have a list with just a few people with whom I've at least exchanged emails than to have a list with hundreds of random people that I don't even know.
I would consider it the greatest compliment to have the Harlot on my friends list and to be on hers, but I don't want to be that person: the annoying, awkward friender on Ravelry.