My mother, like an increasing number of parents, is no stranger to posting what seems like every event in the lives of me, my sister and our dog to her social media followers. (Mostly our dog.) Family friends joke that the weekend doesn't start until they've seen at least one photo of my dog failing to spot me out on the water at rowing. When we go on holidays, relatives back home await reviews from the "hot chocolate critics", where mum will share our ratings on our beverage of choice, a theme for some years.
我的母亲,和很多家长一样,并不是第一次将我、姐姐和狗狗生活中的重大事件分享到社交媒体上。(多数都是狗狗的照片。)朋友们都笑着说,一看到划船时狗狗没能找到我的照片就知道周末来了。外出度假时,家里的亲戚都等着看"热巧克力评论家"的评语,母亲会分享我们对各种饮品的打分情况,这已是多年来的传统。
This is all harmless, and will be nice to look back on one day. But as my sister and I grow up and get social media profiles of our own, the debate over whether mum can photograph, post and tag us has become much more contentious. When I saw Apple Martin's annoyance at her own mother's unauthorised photo sharing (albeit, with 5.3 million followers to my mother's few hundred), it felt like deja vu.
这些都无伤大雅,某一天回顾过去时也能让人感到欣慰。但随着我和姐姐慢慢长大,有了自己的社交媒体账户时,关于母亲是否可以给我们拍照、分享我们的照片并@我们的这一话题也变得越来越有争议。当我看到爱波·马丁(Apple Martin)对母亲在未经其同意的情况下发照片的行为而感到恼火时(尽管她的母亲有530万名粉丝,而我的母亲只有几百名),我也深有同感。
【致家长!在社交媒体上发照片前,请先过问下我们】相关文章:
★ 爱能化解一切辛劳
★ 皮克斯首位华裔女导演执导 《包宝宝》获奥斯卡最佳动画短片
最新
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15
2020-09-15