Formspring.me

April 19, 2010 2:16 pm 1 comment

Have you ever been told to ‘ask me anything?’
   That question has been popping up everywhere lately, from Twitter posts to Facebook status updates to the slightly old-fashioned instant messenger status bar.  And it’s not an empty offer.
   The Web site responsible is called Formspring.me, also known as Formspring, and it’s well on its way to becoming the latest internet craze.
   Formspring is essentially an anonymous comment box.  A Formspring user will send a link to his or her account to friends and family, often with the caption ‘Ask me anything,’ and will answer anonymous questions submitted to them.
   “I’m new to Formspring, so I still get a little excited when someone asks a question,” Granite Bay High School senior David Odineal said.
   The more a Formspring user distributes the link to their account, the more questions they typically receive.  As Formspring and Facebook accounts can be easily connected, Formspring links are a common sight on Facebook walls.
   “I was curious to see what people wanted to know about me,” GBHS Loren Cherry senior, said. “A lot of the questions are things that would make more sense just to ask in person, but it’s cool to get to answer stuff without knowing who it is asking. I think it keeps me more honest, even if it does sometimes limit my answers.”�
   The questions a Formspring user receives run the gamut from pleasant and general to strange and obscure.  Most are benign and silly, but odd enough to warrant anonymity.
    Cherry has been asked if she has broken any bones, if she plays video games, and what her best physical feature is.  But she said that the strangest thing she had ever been asked was what her “worst” personality trait was.
   “I don’t know what kind of answer people expect from that, but it just threw me off,” she said.�
   Some Formspring questions, however, can cross a line.  There have been several instances of the Web site being used as an outlet for anonymous cyber-bullying.�
   This can be extreme, as in the case of Alexis Pilkington, a Long Island teen who was driven to suicide by vicious Formspring taunts.  The slander continued even after her death, present on memorial web pages.
   “We’re in a time where bullying, cyber-bullying, texting, all that stuff is doing tremendous harm to the individual who’s receiving it, but there’s such a disconnect,” GBHS psychology teacher Natalie Elkin said.
   “If I say something negative to you, and I hurt your feelings, I get to see the reaction on your face. In seeing that reaction, I know immediately how you feel, and I’m going to feel badly,” she said.
   “But because of … the internet, where you’ve got so much anonymity and such a disconnect, I send (cruel messages) to you, … but I don’t see the consequences.”
   There are also more subtle forms of bullying common throughout the Web site, such as sexually explicit or otherwise obscene questions. One example of this was a much-publicized fight at a high school, in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, reportedly started on Formspring,
   But some users, like GBHS sophomore Anne Liu, haven’t yet faced that problem.
  “I presume that some of the questions might be overly personal or offensive to other people, had they been asked the question. I have only received a couple of personal questions,” Liu said. “But I don’t take offense to anything, because it’s just my friends being teenagers and doing it for fun.”
  To help filter out unwanted comments, Formspring now allows its users to ban anonymous comments, if they so choose.
   But the online anonymity of Formspring is also a part of its unique appeal, particularly to teens.
   “Teenagers, in particular, always wonder what others think of them,” Odineal said.
   “(People) asking questions can be more honest because of the anonymity. That means that people who have Formspring accounts can hope to find out what people think of them,” he said.
    In that sense, Formspring can be a positive, novel experience – just as long as its users are aware of what kinds of questions they could get, and who asks them.
   “If you decide what your boundaries are, and you are very discerning in the company that you choose to keep, it’s saying I’m not just going to be friends with anyone. I’ve got my standards. I want someone who’s going to be nice to me,” Elkin said.  “(If I only) give my link to those people, I bet (Formspring) is pretty cool.”

1 Comment

  • Hello Haley,

    Read your article & very impressed with your style. Don’t ask me why (because I don’t know), but I’d like to send you a Frank Sinatra CD for your listening pleasure.
    I’d like to send it to the high school newspaper if you’re on the staff.

    When I was in high school in the mid-fifties, I witnessed the exit of of the big band music scene and the wild, wild entry of rock n’ roll. Just a great time to be in high school. As with most kids during that era, I really enjoyed both the outgoing and the incoming. This CD exemplifies the outgoing of that classy big band era.

    Frank
    An old geezer passing off some of my collection.

Leave a Reply


Weather

Clear 42°F Clear
Mon Mostly Sunny
65/47
Tue Rain
56/40
Wed Mostly Sunny
63/38

Archives

Other News

  • Front Page News Benefits of an early start in learning foreign languages

    Benefits of an early start in learning foreign languages

    In the European Union, 50 percent of the population is fluent in more than one language, compared to a mere 25 percent in the United States. All nations in the European Union, in fact, aside from Ireland and Scotland, require students to take foreign language classes. Instead of categorizing language classes as electives, Europeans consider these classes part of a student’s core and place special emphasis on language in the lower grade levels. In around 80 percent of these nations, [...]

    Read more →
  • Front Page News Grizzlies Make History

    Grizzlies Make History

    The football left the hand of senior Granite Bay High School quarterback Brendan Keeney and arched through the clear, cold sky under the watchful stare of thousands of fans at Sacramento State University. The ball seemed to hang in midair, leaving the feeling that the entire season could be hanging on the outcome of this one play, called “Back Pass Right Y Dancer.” GBHS had gone up 10-0 in the early stages of the Sac-Joaquin Section Div. I championship, but [...]

    Read more →
  • Features Front Page

    Grizzly gets students in an up…ROAR

    What’s the first thing that comes to mind when someone thinks of Granite Bay High School? Grizzlies. Being the backbone of any school’s personality, a mascot is what produces school spirit, motivates sports teams and ultimately affects the way people view the school. So what do the students here at GBHS think of the ever-so-humble grizzly that belongs to our school? Most of the students here would agree that this beast of an animal does an accurate job at reflecting [...]

    Read more →
  • Front Page Sports

    Granite Bay Grizzlies Defeat Pleasant Grove Eagles 30-24 in D1 Championship

       Granite Bay Grizzlies defeated the Pleasant Grove Eagles 30—24 at the San Joaquin Division 1 Section Championship football game at the Sacramento State Hornets stadium on Saturday afternoon.    Granite Bay (12-2) won its fourth section title since 1999, but its first in Division One.    Granite Bay’s offense was impressive all day against Pleasant Grove, which began the season ranked No. 8 in the nation. The Grizzlies only had to punt once. All other possessions ended in a [...]

    Read more →
  • Front Page Sports Young Player Takes the Field by Storm

    Young Player Takes the Field by Storm

    Sophomores are so rare on the varsity football team that neither of the Granite Bay High School alumi currently playing in the NFL were chosen to play varsity football as a sophomore. Yet sophomore Tony Ellison was brought up to be a flyback for varsity football. “Some people are just born with talent. Ellison is one of those people,” defensive backs coach Mike Valentine said. “I was blessed with great skill and speed and I work really hard at what [...]

    Read more →
  • Front Page News Importance of Senior Year Underestimated

    Importance of Senior Year Underestimated

    Every student knows how high school is supposed to work: freshman, sophomore and junior year slowly build up the workload and, consequently, the stress. But once the last year of high school arrives and rigorous course work has already been completed in the first three years, seniors are as good as done. At least that is what many students think. Senior year is actually the most important time to impress colleges. Granite Bay High School principal Michael McGuire created a [...]

    Read more →
  • Features Front Page

    Struggling with offensive stereotypes

    Within the confines of a culinary class, it would not generally be considered unusual for one student to warn another not to walk too close to the many ovens around the room. However, when it happened to senior Sam Holzer, the cautionary remark was perceived as hurtful and offensive. Holzer is of the Jewish faith, and the comment had been made by a would-be comedic fellow student who meant to reference the gas chambers and subsequent cremation tactics used by [...]

    Read more →
  • Features Front Page An epic pie-gobbling extravaganza

    An epic pie-gobbling extravaganza

    Pumpkin pies can be a delicious fall favorite, or turn into a pretty nasty dish in a pie eating competition. Needless to say, the Gazette’s first ever “Gazette vs.” challenge was a hilarious success. For the first challenge the Gazette staff took on the yearbook staff in a fall pumpkin pie eating contest. The girls started off our competition, with female Gazette representatives junior Brooklyn Klepl and senior Olivia Cornell pitted against yearbook senior Bridgette Galarza and junior Jenny Woo. [...]

    Read more →
http://www.granitebaygazette.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/asdf1-150x150.jpg