Saturday, December 3

Swabeng Tips: Handling Unwanted Friend Requests

For the past few months, I've been receiving several friend requests in facebook. Most of them are from people I don't know personally. Though I don't mind accepting friend requests, there are times I find it really annoying especially if the name is fictitious and the pictures are so fake. When I saw this from CNN, what a good timing as most people wanted to know how to handle these kinds of requests.

With that, we give you: The Ultimate Guide to the Unwanted Friend Request:


How to handle unwanted friend requests
By Andrea Bartz and Brenna Ehrlich, Special to CNN





Taken from Google


Option 1: Ignore

Freud was totally on to something with that whole repression thing. Treat this friend request like all the other vaguely uncomfortable social issues hovering around your shoulders like miniature dementors (the implied ask-out from that weird girl at work! That college student's persistent requests for an informational interview! The voice mails of murmured Fiona Apple lyrics you keep leaving on your ex-girlfriend's phone when you've been hitting the sauce!) and sweep the whole thing under the rug.

Facebook even makes this the default now -- instead of totally rejecting a request, you simply hit "Not now," relegating it to the realm of "hidden requests." Hey, maybe your clueless would-be amigo will just think you never log into the ol' Book of Face.


Option 2: Accept -- with caution

If you don't feel comfortable relegating your contact to Friend Request Limbo, you can instead send him or her to the halfway house of your limited profile. Then you tell Facebook to, for example, not let certain people read the stupid things your friends post on your wall. Mark Zuckerberg, of course, made this way more difficult than it needs to be.

OK, deep breath: If you don't already have a Limited Profile list, click on "more" next to "Lists" in the left-hand column and then click "Create a list." Name it "Limited Profile," "Professional contacts," "Creepers," whatever. Now surf on over to "privacy settings" under the arrow that's always on the upper right.

Now [another gasp] click on Privacy settings, "edit settings" next to "How you connect," and, next to the last option ("Who can see Wall posts by others on your profile?"), click "custom" and then provide the list name under the option "Hide from." Now accept your frenemy's friendship, hover your mouse over "Friends" and select your stealth list from the drop-down menu. This just takes care of others' wall posts -- you have to go through a whole 'nother rigmarole to block your photo albums, for example.

Well, now that we're exhausted and in need of more caffeine from writing that all out, I think we can all acknowledge that Facebook privacy settings suck and this is probably the least time-efficient solution. But hey, if your boss really will freak out if you don't hit Accept, it may be worth the trouble.


Option 3: Reject, and speak up

Sometimes, a little apologetic explanation will soothe the sting of rejection. Give the person you just turned down a legit-sounding excuse the next time you see them in person (or get them on the phone).

"As a rule, I'm not really Facebook friends with people I know professionally, but let me add you on LinkedIn" is a perfectly reasonable thing to say, for example. Just do the explaining in an oh-by-the-way tone (NOT in a Facebook message or e-mail -- too awkward) and the person will mirror your niceness. We hope.


Option 4: Clean up, already

Cue the Mom Voice: If you're really not happy with the sloppy disaster of a profile you're presenting, it might be time to clean up your image.

Remember, recruiters and employers have an almost uncanny ability to find pictures and updates that you thought were private. (Mind-blowing actual exchange in Facebook's official Q&A: I set my photo album to Friends, but others are seeing, liking and commenting on my photos. The FB team responds with the digital equivalent of a dismissive wave of the hand.) And snap after snap of you passed out next to a toilet (or updates gleefully recounting your vomitacious episodes) are just, well, trashy.

Rule of thumb: Don't put anything on Facebook that you wouldn't want your aunt/boss/creepy neighbor seeing, even if you give them the big Reject.

Just make sure to be always aware when accepting friend requests.

14 comments:

  1. I think I've done all of the 4 listed above. I agree to place some level of information reserves in one's Facebook account. It's just fundamental for security reasons.

    dimaks
    http://the-urban-walker.blogspot.com/

    ReplyDelete
  2. I don't add people whom I really don't know. Unless a blogger. I only add some when I get the chance to talk to them about some stuff about blogging or others. I love to interact with them. Not just an annoying friend request then you have nothing to do with each other. Especially my FB account is private. :s

    Anyways nice post about this. :)

    www.babyvox.info - My Blog

    ReplyDelete
  3. The problem with ignoring is that it's annoying to see the numbers increasing everyday. Some of them I also ignore some I just decline some I accept if we have common friends then observe their behavior online if I don't like how they interact then I unfriend them.

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  4. i dis some of the tips already since I've been receiving a lot of request as well haha! xx

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  5. we should only put something in facebook that we could explain if questioned. otherwise, we should really think about what we put / upload for all others to see

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  6. Great thoughts! :D
    Don't forget your exes. lol

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  7. Good to know that there are ways to screen friend requests.
    Thank you for sharing this information to us.

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  8. nice tips... i usually just ignore them, especially those whom i don't know personally or wasn't included in my interest. Yahweh bless.

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  9. just reject if you don't know or you don't feel the person.

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  10. good suggestions but for less hassles and easy i just ignore.

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  11. Good tips. In as much as we love to connect to people, we should still be wary of spies and those who just want to make gulo.

    On our part when we make friend requests, we should leave a message on how we know or met the person when we try to add them :)

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  12. been receiving requests from unknown people these days. Thanks for these tips! :)

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