Sunday, December 26, 2010

Unfriending, Blocking, Unblocking and Refriending

The unfriend option is the first line of privacy defense one can use on Facebook. An unfriend can happen without warning. If the unfriender in question was unimportant, the unfriendee might never even notice and probably would not even care. But if the unfriender in question was important, the unfriendee can notice very quickly. Navigate to the unfriender’s profile and the Facebook page contains significantly less information and offers the opportunity to “Add as Friend” by clicking on a blue button.

The block option is a more serious privacy tool. These are the digital equivalent of a restraining order. Blocks can come without warning as well. They do what the word means. A blockee cannot even view a blocker’s pages. The only evidence a blockee can even see of a blockee might be in other people’s tagged photographs. But the blocker’s tag will not provide a link back to the blocker’s profile page for the blockee.

Facebook provides these options to users so they can defend their privacy online and associate only with those with whom they choose to associate. But the existence of such easily deployed defenses adds a new layer of complexity to how people set boundaries with one another. Adolescents are particularly active on Facebook. Unfriending and blocking happen with greater frequency among adolescents than they do among adults. Unblocking and refriending also happen with greater frequency among adolescents.

Every so often Philip experiences an unfriend from a peer and it is to the point where it generally does not even bother Philip any more. He knows that many of his peers are impulsive and that it only requires two clicks of a mouse to unfriend somebody. The act itself usually serves to lower Philip’s opinion of the unfriender in question. Since Philip will not send a friend request to anyone who has unfriended him, the unfriender puts himself or herself in the position of either sending a refriend request or remaining reciprocally unfriended.

Despite Philip’s social resilience to adolescent social politics on Facebook, there was one unfriend that did bother Philip. Nearly one year ago, Erica decided to unfriend Philip. Believing he could easily rectify whatever had led to the unfriend, Philip went to talk to Erica about it during their lunch break at school. In their exchange, she flatly denied unfriending him. But that evening, instead of refriending Philip, Erica blocked him. Her block was followed by Erica bad-mouthing Philip on Facebook, on Formspring and perhaps elsewhere treating the fact that Philip cared about the unfriending as something to joke about with others.

Erica’s unfriend could be written off as impulsive. Lying to Philip when he confronted her in an attempt to reconcile could be attributed to insecurity. The block was an insult that would admittedly be difficult to forgive. But in the end, the talking behind Philip’s back was nothing short of an act of war. For the remainder of their freshman year, things were cold at best between Philip and Erica. But the war Erica initiated took a very distant back seat in both their lives. Philip focused on the varsity lacrosse team, while Erica focused on developing a relationship with an older guy.

By the time their sophomore year was comfortably in session, there didn’t seem to be any outward evidence of a rift between Philip and Erica. Philip was back on Erica’s short list of guys she would press up against for photos. Their smiles in these photos as they were published onto Facebook certainly appeared genuine. But on Facebook, the unfriend and block were still in effect and would remain so until Erica at least made the first move.

That move took place some time before their Thanksgiving break. Perhaps Erica even did it on November 17th, National Unfriending Day. The exact date is unknown. But Philip suddenly noticed Erica’s tags on the photos in which they both appeared suddenly contained links to Erica’s profile page. Philip was glad that Erica had unblocked him, but he certainly was not comfortable initiating a refriend. Erica made her second move after the holiday break had begun by sending Philip a refriend request.

And that is where things stand at the time of this writing. The two have not traded words on the subject in nearly a year. Instead, everything has been unspoken. Now the request to be, Erica’s friend again greets Philip each time he logs onto Facebook. But Philip has still not decided whether or not to refriend with Erica or how long to wait if he does. While Philip is happy to be on friendly terms with Erica at school, the idea of merely accepting the refriend request does not sit well with him. Erica’s insult simply went too far and lasted too long.

And maybe there is just a little bit of satisfaction having the tables turned, because now Philip is the one refusing without explanation to refriend Erica, rather than it being the other way around.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Erica sounds like a nut! Sadly I'm an adult in my 30s and have dealt with two sisters in their late 40s/early 50s who behaved the same way towards me on separate occasions. The first sister insulted me publicly on FB, pretty badly by anyones standards, and when I politely expressed that I was offended, and my friends rallied round to back me up, she unfriended and blocked me. At this time, the other sister backed me up quite admirably. But over the following year this sister began to snipe at me, delete my postings/comments, emailed back less and less and finally sent me a nasty email outlining their criticisms of me (never knew about them because was never told) and forbidding me to contact them ever again. I was then, despite our having many mutual friends and going back almost 20 years, unceremoniously unfriended!
How I wish that both sisters could have acted their ages and resolved the conflict with me like adults. I was open to that, still am, but it is quite worrying when they are so much older than me and don't seem to be capable of that. I can only assume it was an upbringing/genetic thing with them. In a way I feel sorry for them as they must find relationships with others so much more difficult than I do! Their friends have remained my friends and I get the impression that at least one of them does not approve of the last sister's behaviour towards me. Nobody sane would really, it was totally OTT and childish and I'm a very reasonable, approachable sort of person, just like the guy in your story. I still can't believe that two people old enough to be my parents would behave like that!
So it hurts to lose the last sister, who I thought was a friend and was very important to me, and I feel angry that I was denied the opportunity of closure by being able to reply, but I have to accept that she is extremely deluded, conceited, cowardly and evidently has a lot of growing up to do still! xx

Anonymous said...

blocking confuses me...can one block a friend of a friend?