UK council in trouble over tweeting

Councillors in Cornwall, UK, are in trouble after claims a number of them used Twitter during a meeting to mock other members – the same behaviour that takes place in the backchannel of every social media conference.

They could face being reported to the authority’s standards committee and if they’re judged to have broken the code of conduct for inappropriate comments, could face suspension.

The tweets apparently included:

“naughty boy!”

“high level of accidental sexual innuendo in the council today”

“she said phones must be switched off. (I love that we’re completely ignoring that instruction)”

“chairman indirectly instructs us not to tweet from the meeting. Whoops!”

Cornwall Council has said that it is currently developing a social media policy which recognises the potential for social networking tools to communicate and engage with the public, but would also highlight the importance of regulating usage to avoid anything which could adversely affect its reputation.

I think it’s quite surprising there are still Government organisations which aren’t operating with even a basic social media policy in place – but at the same time, we can only hope politicians and councillors remain encouraged to show their human side of social networks rather than being regulated into the same impersonal figures which many people feel disenfranchised from.

When concerns over social networks go way too far…

Businesses and organisations can either embrace the opportunities and challenges of increasingly easy social interaction, or they can react against it. And two recent examples show how worrying that reaction can be.

Most digitally-aware people realise that anything you put on a public (or even supposedly private) social networking site can be seen by people including your employers.

But how about Bozeman City, in Montana, which requires job applicants to hand over their log-in information and passwords to any internet chat rooms, social networks or forums?

Why should potential employees have any right to privacy at all?

And then a media company, which by rights should know better, gets shown up. The Associated Press has issued social media guidelines, which not only match the restrictions put out by other media outlets such as the Wall Street Journal,  but actually asks employees to monitor and edit what appears on their social network profiles, even when it’s written by their friends.

From the guidelines (via Mashable)

“Q. Anything specific to Facebook?

It’s a good idea to monitor your profile page to make sure material posted by others doesn’t violate AP standards; any such material should be deleted. Also, managers should not issue friend requests to subordinates, since that could be awkward for employees. It’s fine if employees want to initiate the friend process with their bosses.

The News Media Guild, which represents 1500+ AP employees is rightly speaking out about the matter, which could, in theory, see AP employees punished for something written by someone else on their profile wall etc. Or, as is equally likely, a spambot.