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If you value your account, that in itself is skin in the game... skin in the game is just having something (pertinent to the topic) to lose.
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I think personal identification online is thoroughly overrated. Accountability improves behavior. Reputation stifles it, esp. if you're in a sensitive position.
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Personally, I have very little to lose by revealing more personal information. But it's nobody's business on here unless they're a personal friend. Conversely, I've lost some followers I cared about over contentious topics. To me, that's already plenty of skin in the game.
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As for skin in the game itself, its usefulness both interpersonally and personally seems very context-dependent. You'll typically want your decision to matter. You don't necessarily want your social media presence to affect your personal life directly.
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All good points. I'm just pushing back on some corners of anonymous Twitter culture that seem to thrive in the dark. Good and creative for a while, but then mold grows and infections start.
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I (think I) see what you're getting at. For me, though, things like "will I get fired for this," or "what will my mother (the consummate stalker) think of this?" are not questions I'd like to entertain.
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That's fair. However, speaking personally, I am slowly trying to integrate all corners of my life. But before integration has to occur, differentiation is necessary...
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Again, the personal utility of skin in the game is paradigmatic. A thief does not want the same profile as a politician does not want the same profile as a teacher. If you can integrate all elements, I think that's a worthwhile enough goal. But for many people, that's a big if.
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No, no, I know. I'm just saying if I came here to post how-tos for petty theft, I probably wouldn't even be using the same computer consistently. ;) My own skills are highly transferable and I have a comfortable personal safety net. I wouldn't risk getting fired if I were poor.
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