Out on Facebook: move over, Friendster: an online community made for college students has been growing fast, especially among young gays and lesbians.Most mornings, Princeton University Princeton University, at Princeton, N.J.; coeducational; chartered 1746, opened 1747, rechartered 1748, called the College of New Jersey until 1896. Schools and Research Facilities student Robert Kennelley sits down in front of his computer to do two important things: check his e-mail and log on to Facebook.com, an online community primarily for intercollegiate in·ter·col·le·giate adj. Involving or representing two or more colleges. Adj. 1. intercollegiate - used of competition between colleges or universities; "intercollegiate basketball" students that has exploded in popularity over the past year; it was recently also made available to high schools. Unlike its popular counterpart, Friendster.com, Facebook is open only to individuals with a university e-mail address See Internet address. e-mail address - electronic mail address or a screened high school address, and gay students are getting into it in a big way. The site allows the 21-year-old Kennelley to regularly update his online profile, including an ever-changing list of favorite bands and movies. But there is one field he doesn't change: In the category "interested in," Kennelley has filled in "men." He is what's known among Facebook users as "out on the Facebook," a student whose profile describes an interest in dating someone of the same sex. "It's no longer even something I give a second thought to," says Kennelley, who came out at 18. "Part of me is very [obsessive ob·ses·sive adj. Of, characteristic of, or causing an obsession. ob·ses sive n. ], and so I have to fill out every
box on the form if at all possible. I wasn't going to omit o·mit tr.v. o·mit·ted, o·mit·ting, o·mits 1. To fail to include or mention; leave out: omit a word. 2. a. To pass over; neglect. b. putting 'men' because I saw no reason not to." Kennelley's profile also includes his campus address, his cell phone number, and the courses he is taking. It can be seen by over 7,500 Princeton undergraduates and faculty who need only a "princeton.edu" e-mail address to register on the free site. "It's a visual," says Kennelley, who uses Facebook three or four times a day to look up cell phone numbers or just to kill time. "It's very much something students use to connect with each other now." The site went online in February 2004 for Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. students, but after 6,000 students registered within the first three weeks, its founder, then-Harvard undergraduate Mark Zuckerberg Mark Elliot Zuckerberg (born May 14, 1984) is an American computer programmer and entrepreneur. As a Harvard College student he founded the online social networking website Facebook with the help of fellow Harvard student and computer science major Andrew McCollum as well as , wanted to see if it would catch on at other schools. Now Facebook.com boasts over 4 million registered users at over 2,000 colleges. From the beginning Facebook wanted to be gay-friendly, says Chris Hughes Chris Hughes could refer to one of several notable men:
n. The direction of one's sexual interest toward members of the same, opposite, or both sexes, especially a direction seen to be dictated by physiologic rather than sociologic forces. is through the "interested in" field. The hope was "to open up as much space as possible for different identities," Hughes says. "We agreed that it was a much more logical way to set up the whole sexuality identification." Gay and lesbian students at some schools may want to be cautious about coming out on Facebook. "At some schools, perhaps even the majority of the schools in our nation, being gay or interested in the same sex is still controversial," says Hughes. "But I think most of the people who are comfortable [coming out] on Facebook are also those who are willing to face the challenges that might come with that in social environments." Kennelley agrees. "In this day and age you have to weigh the dangers with the benefits," he says. "Of course, I think being out far outweighs any dangers it entails. Being out on the Facebook is a statement, just like coming out face-to-face. It has that same value." |
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