[pct-l] Posting names

Tortoise Tortoise73 at charter.net
Wed May 4 23:13:08 CDT 2011


I'm with LRod on this. And boy did I start a discussion when I posted my 
prior message.

There are risks everywhere -- I might go for a solo hike, have a serious 
accident, and no one would ever miss me for a few days. Now when I go solo 
hiking I usually leave a note in my truck giving my general itinerary and 
expected completion. Might aid my rescue if my truck seemed abandoned.

I never widely post my planned absences although I do tell many of the 
people I'm involved with in some way.

I think common courtesy and good manners mean that you ask others before 
taking their picture or posting thier where-abouts. What an individual 
posts about themselves is their responsibility. All I can do is give them 
some general advice.

Tortoise

<>  Because truth matters.<>


On 05/04/11 10:24, Donna "L-Rod" Saufley wrote:
> In "Walk", there is a scene where two guys looking for Teatree find her.  They are complete strangers to her, but they knew exactly where she would be after reading her trail journal. It didn't matter whether she was using her real name or her trail name.
>
> It only took one hiker telling me that she didn't want her wherabouts published online because of a stalking-related murder on the AT for me to recognize that it was not a good idea to be telling an anonymous audience where anyone was. More innocently, There are those who want to follow the hikers' progress like it was a horse race, whether the hikers know and want this or not. To be tracked and monitored from afar is a concept abhorrent to me, though from the popularity of spot-me-now devices and trail journals, I am probably in the minority.
>
> If hikers want to tell the world where they are, that's their choice. They can call or journal if they choose. It's not my place (and IMO anyone else's) to post in real time where someone might be found along the trail. Post about your OWN hike if you desire, but someone else's hike should not be fodder for sharing unknowingly.
>
> There are some very different and interesting people on the trail, and many points of view. There are people running away from family, personal situations, or their own demons. I've witnessed people running away from medical treatments they didn't want, and their family searching for them to force them into receiving the unwanted care.  I don't know everyone's story, nor do I ask or assume. Despite the best intentions, sharing information about where others are could lead to unintended consequences for them.
>
> The trail is a place of solace and escape. Though perhaps the majority seem unconcerned about such things, I find that a blanket respect for individual privacy works best. I am probably a dying breed, a relic, a dinosaur. It is ironic that common courtesy and respect is dwindling as the ability to inform has exploded.
>
> L-Rod
>
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Ken Murray<kmurray at pol.net>
>> Sent: May 4, 2011 10:31 AM
>> To: "."<pct-l at backcountry.net>
>> Subject: [pct-l] Posting names
>>
>> I personally think that this concept of anonymity and disclosure, is a carryover of our paranoia of life in civilization.
>>
>> For example, how many of us would think it neccessary to avoid mentioning names in talking about doing something with a friend OTHER THAN ON THE TRAIL?
>> "I'm going to have lunch with my friend Nancy Marshall at Classy Goose on wed".
>> Would I go through life asking people for permission to post their names?
>>
>> What makes this truly bizarre, is the added security of trail names...basically most people having a "code name", that no one outside of our small community is likely to know.  OFTEN gender neutral.
>>
>> If someone is REALLY worried about keeping anonymous, THEY can SAY SO, THEY can change their trail name repeatedly, THEY can not interact with people, THEY can not sign registers with recognizable names, THEY can pay only with cash, THEY can avoid trail angels, THEY can use made up names for the mail drops, etc.  THEY can take PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY for their bizarre paranoia.
>>
>> When will it occur to someone, that random pictures might catch someone's image.  Or that they did not SPECIFICALLY get permission to post an image that might be recognizable. OMG!
>>
>> Instead, lets act like rational people, and the close-knit community of caring people that we are.
>>
>> What world do YOU want to live in?  I know which I do.  Others can make other choices, they have that power.
>>
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