Transparency must serve as the foundation of Internet-based communications. We have to demand it. That's because the lack of a formal peer review process in social media creates an environment in which rumor, innuendo and intimidation can easily gain the upper hand.
I find it disconcerting when a professional has to hide in the shadows when voicing an opinion on a topic. It just happened with an in-house attorney at Cisco who came clean about his authorship of a blog about patent trolling only when his identity was discovered.
Cisco Sued Because of Employee Blogging
http://gigaom.com/2008/03/24/cisco-sued-because-of-employee-blogging/
It's occurring with entrepreneurs and venture capitalists with two Web sites that allow them to trash each other in anonymity. Aren't they in the business of building innovation, wealth and value together?
If you have something to say in the blogosphere, on a message board or in a social network...then do it with a strong, well articulated position. Make yourself known. Encourage debate. And blackball those who fail to live up to that standard.
Hiding in the shadows is for the weak.
Marc Hausman is president/CEO of Strategic Communications Group, a public relations consultancy based in Silver Spring, MD. Read more at: http://www.strategicguy.blogspot.com/.