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Being active on a social network is not the same as having a social life - meet people, make friends, and make an effort to reach out to them. THAT’s having a social life

In this digital age social media apps are part of the social life, if you don’t have them you’re limiting your social life by not partaking in them.

why is that even important?

This is our mentality (privacy loving people).

You need an Instagram account to be a valid human

This is their mentality (mainstream people).

I don’t know which age group you belong to but social media apps are very essential for 18-24 age group to make connections. This is also the age where peer pressure is high and those who don’t partake in some activities get sidelined very quickly. Instagram and Snapchat play a vital role in the dating, no one is willing to share their # anymore. If you say you don’t have Insta or Snap all you’ll get is a weird up to down stare and the words “I’m sorry”.

having a privacy oriented mindset online doesn’t make you antisocial in person though.

Unfortunately, it does. There has been multiple research conducted in this field. Please look up the following for yourself:

“The Social Costs of Privacy”, by Jonathan Zittrain,

“Privacy and Social Connection”, by Sherry Turkle.

Having a privacy-oriented mindset makes one more anti-social. Frequenting privacy-centric communities should be avoided.

https://lemmy.world/post/8221245

Having a privacy-oriented mindset makes one more anti-social. Frequenting privacy-centric communities should be avoided. - Lemmy.World

So, I’m questioning my stance on social media apps. Recently I started talking to a girl on a dating site and after a few days of talking today, she asked for my Instagram ID. I don’t have an active Instagram account because I hate their data-hoarding practices. For nearly 6 years now, r/privacy has been stuffing into my brain that Instagram is inherently bad for privacy. So I avoided it. Now coming back to the situation, I remembered that I created a burner account long back and I hastily reactivated it. It had 0 followers, no name, no bio and was set to private. I changed the username, followed some random accounts and gave this Instagram account to that girl and while sharing my ID I made up a story that I deactivated my account several months ago and reactivated only recently and my followers “vanished” due to deactivation. She immediately got weird about it and asked whether I still used the account to which I replied yes and then she asked if I had any posts on that account, luckily I posted some shitposts and memes on that account and had a couple of story highlights. She softened her guard now and gave me a follow request. After going through my account she got somewhat reassured that I was a real person and was not a bot. This has got me questioning my stance on social media apps, like whether I should follow such a stringent No-No policy or should I follow a lax approach. Last year, the Clubhouse app was getting popular and every single one of my friends created accounts and hopped one to chat rooms but I didn’t even install it solely because of my philosophy of privacy. I’ve noticed that frequenting communities such as r/privacy and /c/privacy tends to make users form a more extreme take on privacy over time and it also makes them more and more anti-social over time. I was a social butterfly 10 years ago and had a ton of friends on Facebook, in 2015 I deleted my Facebook account and in 2017 I passively started visiting r/privacy, I immediately got into digital footprint cleansing and burned most of my accounts. I slowly became more anti-social and didn’t use any social network- no Instagram, Snapchat, Discord etc., This has taken a toll on my social life. And in this debacle, I don’t WISH to be anti-social, I’m anti-social but not in a voluntary manner. I’m in my prime years and I need friends and relationships at this age but my privacy standpoint is mangling with those. We all know that having a social life is essential for dating and that social life also includes the use of social media apps but my extreme takes on privacy disturbs all of this- like I change all my usernames every 3 months. This kind of practice is seen as “weird” and “extreme” by many. In my honest opinion, I think that a user should draw a line between privacy and social life and should stop things and analyse if they think things are going downhill and also consume privacy-related content in moderation.

The link starts with ! Please make sure to include the !
Hi! You’re using fluffy chat right? In fluffy chat you have to click the “Discover” option and then paste the link to my space: !WWreQNpCubYEuZnMxI:matrix.org
You’re using Element right? Yeah, the app has been icky for the past couple days.

My experience from interacting with Germans is that you are above-average privacy conscious

I too observed the same after reading numerous comments and posts from EU residents in Reddit and the like. I think this has to do with strict Data privacy laws there and it’s propagated in various forms of media so even the average consumer knows about it.

gives me some level of hope that it is possible to gain some general awareness on these topics also in my country and elsewhere

I think for this to happen stricter data privacy laws should be adapted by countries and should be advertised so hard that even your grandma knows about it. This is the only way we can normalise conversations about privacy.

The link now works! Please join and bring along your privacy-loving friends!
The link now works! Please join and bring along your privacy-loving friends!
The link now works! Please join and bring along your privacy-loving friends!