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Facebook postings, photos incriminate dorm party-goers

University students caught in compromising situation through online group

Drew Chalfant

Issue date: 11/2/05 Section: News
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Northern Kentucky University students have joined a growing list of college students who have learned the price of letting it all hang out on the Internet.

Four NKU students learned the hard way that Big Brother is always watching. The students received University Code of Conduct violations when administrators saw pictures posted on Facebook.com that depicted them drinking in a Kentucky Hall dorm room.

The four students received a $50 fine, one year of probation on campus and were forced to attend a class about the dangers of binge drinking.

Facebook is an online community that allows students to create a profile based on the school they attend. Mark Zuckerberg, a Harvard graduate, created the Web site in 2004. The Web site describes itself as "an online directory that connects people through social networks at schools."

With the expanding popularity of online communities, some students have discovered that they aren't the only ones checking up on their friends.

"Some RA turned us in. They saw the pictures and then we got (our violations)," Erik, one of the four students and host of the party at which the pictures were taken, said.

The pictures feature students surrounding a keg of beer they managed to bring into the dorms. "We were going to say it was a root beer keg but we figured they were smarter than that," Erik said.

The use of Facebook to catch students can lead one to wonder: How far are administrators willing and able to go to catch students the breaking rules?

"You are at your own risk posting stuff on there," said Pete Trentacoste, assistant Director of University Housing. Trentacoste explained that while the administration does not usually go looking for evidence of illegal activity online, it is often brought to its attention by someone else.

"Facebook is not something we look at a whole lot. I don't know that administrators are really that attuned to it," Trentacoste said.
An editorial written by the editors of The Technician, a student newspaper at North Carolina State University, expressed outrage over a similar situation. They argued that it is impossible to tell if students really are breaking rules or if a picture only seems to depict drinking or other violations.
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