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I know big technology companies keep track of our every move online, but what about privacy among family members and friends online?

I answered this question a couple of years ago with a caution to perhaps not share so much onlineā€”even with family and friends. I think I thought then that privacy is an unalienable right and it was my job to remind you all of this fact.

Recently, though, I heard an interesting story on the This American Life podcast that made me think that perhaps what appear to be breaches of privacy might be something else entirely.

As I recall it, the true story went something like this: a numbers-guy father asked each of his adult children to email him their GPS coordinates every night (their work required them to travel quite a bit). He would take these coordinates from all but one son who refused to play along, put them into a spreadsheet, average the coordinates, and report back to his children the specific location at the average coordinates. Thatā€™s it. The resulting location had no meaning or purpose.

But as the interview with the father and children continued, it was obvious the means were unrelated to the end. Like a loved oneā€™s ā€œCall me when you get there,ā€ this dad wanted to know his children were OK and to fix in his mind a physical location where they might be. And in return, when he replied with the random location, he reminded them that he was paying attention. It was an act of loveā€”perhaps a roundabout way of expressing that love, but love nonetheless.

So maybe when we share where we are via an app like Snapchat, weā€™re letting the people who love us know that weā€™re OK and where we were three hours agoā€”not quite a hug, but a mutual expression of love nonetheless.

 

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