I've been thinking a lot lately about the level of anonymity I'd like to aim for in this blog. It seems that most of the blogs that I read strike this balance somewhere between complete disclosure and "complete" anonymity (with most leaning towards anonymity). What seems more likely is that these
bloggers strive for the illusion of anonymity, since nobody with an
IP address is truly anonymous.
It seems like plenty of law student blogs eventually are removed or password protected, which I assume is a reaction intended to protect a blogger (
Silly Little Law Student where are you? I miss your cheekiness). Whether its a move to preserve career prospects or a reaction to snoopy classmates, significant self-censorship
might take the fun out of the entire venture (just ask
Butterflyfish). Maybe in retrospect many students decide that they have simply shared too much, or that they are
embarrassed by the naivete of their posts.
Do students always start out by over-disclosing and eventually reign things in? I have noticed that some of my fellow almost-1Ls, like
Terra Nullius and
A Woman in Law School have even posted their pictures on their blogs. I'm not willing to go that far, but I'm also kind of a weenie. I really admire their willingness to be up-front about what they are doing and to truly own their statements and opinions. But isn't part of the fun of blogging the fact that you can blow off some of that law school pressure by venting about all of the crazy people you have to interact with?
Thanks, But No Thanks's
snarkiness is what I LOVE about her blog and I suspect if she filtered more of her writing it wouldn't be nearly as funny.
There is speculation over whether a blogger should even aim for anonymity, like in
this especially good post. I get that. "Anonymity" may be a tempting cover for the wide practice of acting like a moron on the
internet. Very
un-Dude.
I'd like to set the tone early, in part to have some sort of guide and in part to just keep myself from being as asshole. But I'm blunt and cheeky and not-always-super-
nicey-nice in real life, so why should I change that for a blog?
Ok, so I don't act this way towards my boss, but I don't hide this side of my personality either. Trying to remain as anonymous as possible (by not checking or posting in class, not telling anyone about my blog etc) feels a little deceptive. Is there a way to achieve balance?
Probably, I shouldn't worry so much about it now. I should do what works for me, while it works for me, until it doesn't. And then I change. Its not necessarily an admission of defeat to remove or password protect a blog, and its not a revision of the past either. It is a revision of the present. For now I'll just try to keep on
keepin on.