About once a week: Jessica: Can I still say <word or phrase>? Me: Yeah, that's still ok.
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Replying to @paulg
How often is the answer "no"? The ratio would be a pretty good discovered measure of her tolerance for false positives, which I'd assume would be very low in today's social climate.
1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @mattknox
Maybe 3% of the time, although if the time window went say 10 years into the future, it might be 10%.
3 replies 0 retweets 12 likes -
I liked it better when intent mattered.
4 replies 1 retweet 42 likes -
Come on, you guys are way more powerful and influential than you were 20 years ago (which is exciting!) What’s that Spiderman line? With great power, comes great responsibility? Words matter. They travel farther & faster than they did a decade ago. We should exercise care.
5 replies 2 retweets 82 likes -
Replying to @kimmaicutler @Jason and
One downside to ‘exercising care’ shows up when it isn’t obvious to ~everyone what is “okay” to say or not say, which seems like the case here. Like modern day etiquette...makes it harder to break in. If you have to have someone who “knows” the rules show you, networks matter.
1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
Yes, no one could write a standard Miss Manners or Ann Landers column/book today. Much harder when you can instantly connect with hundreds of thousands or millions of people from cultures all over the world. Not only that, they can respond right back to you in front of everyone!
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