The Ray Lam-Facebook Debacle

Thinking about former Vancouver NDP candidate Ray Lam, his downfall, and the nature of digital rights.

At times like these, I’m glad to have a relatively small footprint on the web’s lunar landscape. The news this week was about sad-sack NDP candidate Ray Lam – ex-NDP candidate Ray Lam – who was running to represent the Vancouver-False Creek riding in May’s provincial election. The 22-year-old’s prospects came to a crashing halt when it was revealed that… well, when he was revealed, in a variety of suggestive poses, on his Facebook page: in his underwear in one photo, hand on a woman’s chest in another. Not the sort of baby-kissing, flapjack-flipping imagery one needs to launch a career in politics.

It’s very easy to criticize Lam’s judgment in publishing such photos (even if, as he claims, it was in the private, invite-only section of the website). It’s easier still to criticize the NDP for not properly vetting the candidate in the first place. But what gets overlooked in all this is the paradigm shift in how younger generations treat the notion of the private/public divide – and the implications for businesses, government and other organizations that will, at some point, have to hire these young people.

For those who’ve grown up with Facebook, MySpace, YouTube and Twitter – and Lam, at 22, was born and raised in the Age of the Internet – the idea of keeping things private is a foreign concept. Every party photo gets posted, tagged and shared with friends on Facebook; every hobby, talent and indulgence is cataloged on MySpace and YouTube; every thought or observation, indeed every twitch, is tweeted on Twitter. The Internet babies live in the moment, and for Lam it likely wasn’t a consideration, when he posted those pics on Facebook, that he might run for public office one day. Even if he did harbour such aspirations, he probably didn’t – perhaps still doesn’t – see the problem with exposing himself to such an extent. Why would he? All his friends are doing it. It is the new norm.

The question nobody’s asking is: will we, as employers and as electors, establish our own new norm? Will we hire the bright, ambitious programmer who’s got a profanity-filled video of his punk-rock band up on MySpace? Will we take on the young engineering student, top of her class, despite angry anarchist blog entries from first-year university? Will we vote for the young community organizer with a slightly randy streak, or banish the aspiring pol for all eternity?

The open-book nature of this new generation makes it easier than ever to find reasons for rejection; their personal peccadilloes are laid bare for all the world to see. Whether we can afford to be so roundly dismissive – when companies face looming talent shortages and the level of public cynicism, bred by decades of closed-book politics, has reached a new high – is another matter.

Related Links
Leave Your Comment
If you'd like to post a comment, please or . When submitted, your comment will be queued for approval.

Please note: If you were registered on the old BCBusiness website, your account no longer exists. Please take five seconds to create a fresh account.
Ray created a web 2.0 response to this whole thing because of all the media spin and misinformation around his resignation. His statement on the home page is...unbelievable tame, and he writes about the whole incident in a blog, which is actually pretty interesting. Give it a read: www.raysunderwearaffair.com.
I find the last post to be distasteful and defaming a political candidate with lies. The community work Ray Lam has done is more than the previous poster can show.
well put 10:07
Yes, leave the drinking and driving to Gordon Campbell of the Liberals.
This whole thing is so overblown. It's not as though Ray Lam was a convicted drunk driver or anything ... he was acting like any 20-something male, goofing off with friends. If no one was hurt by what he did, what should it matter? People should be judged by the quality of their contributions, not by what they do in their time off. I couldn't care less about what Ray Lam does at parties, so long as he's a good representative of the community. Frankly I'm disappointed in the NDP for not defending him. As for your examples, why should you care if the programmer you hire plays in a raunchy punk band in his off-hours? If he shows up on time, does the job you pay him to do, and is a polite and respectful employee it's none of your business what his taste in music or personal artistic expression is. I can hardly believe it's a debate at all.
poll

Do you like networking at events?

Do you like networking at events?

Choices

Quote
Brian Wong, CEO of Kiip Inc.,
on being a 21-year-old CEO
S M T W T F S
 
 
1
 
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
 
7
 
8
 
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
 
14
 
15
 
16
 
17
 
18
 
19
 
20
 
21
 
22
 
23
 
24
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
 
29
 
30
 
31
 
 
 
Save over 50% off the newsstand price with a subscription to BCBusiness Magazine Subscribe Now
Other BCBusiness Features
Online and in print, BCBusiness articulates the trends and issues affecting business in BC. The award-winning BCBusiness, essential companion to corporate titans and entrepreneurs alike, delivers provocative BC business news and commentary on traditional and digital platforms: videos, articles, blogs, and columns addressing all aspects of business in BC, including management, marketing, leadership, innovation, technology, careers, human resources, finance, and entrepreneurship. Vancouver small business owners, managers, CEOs, and digital entrepreneurs prize BCBusiness for its signature mix of analysis and opinion on the issues and people shaping business in BC. Join BCBusiness on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn - and at the premier West Coast business networking events, like BC's Top 100 Companies, Entrepreneur of the Year, BC's Top Innovators, and Best Companies to Work for in BC.