<p>mommusic…yikes, of course… my mental spell check is apparently not working this am [I failed the #10 point, but by golly, my kid better never do that!]</p>
<p>Haha. I’ve seen all sorts of variants on common expressions, put forth by people whose native tongue isn’t English and who are just going on a phonetic understanding of the words.</p>
<p>Oh no, I’ve never put a bill in a reply envelope with the address backwards so it comes back to me. :D</p>
<p><em>nods</em> Same risk once you actually get into college, as well. You put evidence of something illegal on there, and school officials can still see it. Not to mention any possible future employers.</p>
<p>There are ways to help protect your privacy, but it’s safest not to put things like that there at all.</p>
<p>I agree - this should be a non-issue, if people use common sense about their networking sites. But I’d still be curious to know how many overworked adcoms make it a point to check out myspace or facebook. I was surprised when my d told me that the common app asks for the applicant’s IM name. It’s not mandatory to provide it, though.</p>
<p>Don’t think that privacy settings affect administrators of the sites. I’d be willing to bet that administrators at colleges can see everyone on their college’s Facebook group, particularly if it’s hosted on their network. And your individual privacy settings aren’t going to stop them.</p>
<p>I think the best thing that could happen would be to bust open MySpace and Facebook for the world to read and see what these kids are REALLY like. It might be an eye opening experience. If the want to be in the adult world, they need to act like it.</p>