Drama Mamas: When connecting online seems like a Real bad IDea

When is your privacy not your privacy? When it's connected to everyone else's privacy. This week, the Drama Mamas help a reader whose desire to reserve sharing her email address and online status for her real-life friends is heating up her WoW friends list -- and they're boiling over at not being included.
Hi Drama Mamas, I've decided to only add people as Real ID friends who are RL friends that play on another server. I'm one of those people who sometimes like to hop on a character unknown to the folks I usually play with and spend some hours ingame on my own or with my boyfriend. However, I do have a lot of ingame friends I'm pretty close with and talk about a lot of things apart from the game.
After installing the patch and logging on my main, it took only half an hour before I got the first whisper, containing an email adress and asking me to add them via Real ID. I told the person no, I'm only going to add very few RL friends to that list. I recieved a very sulky reply. Today the scenario repeated itself, meaning two days of playing very little have passed and two people are already angry at me for not adding them. Is there anything I can do to prevent other ingame friends to react the same? Why can't some people accept that sometimes I do want to play, but don't want to chat? Taz'Dingo, Anonyma
It's rather like the debate over whether or not to close the bathroom door when your significant other is around. Those who do are horrified at the boors who don't, and those who don't relentlessly mock the prudes who do. "Right" or "wrong" ... come again? This sort of thing is completely up to your social sensibilities and personal comfort level -- as is the decision over whether or not to employ a video game like World of Warcraft as a window into your personal and social life.
Now, you may get this concept, and I may get this concept -- but your in-game friends obviously have other goals in mind. What you need at this point is a lighter-than-air touch. Telling others outright that you are accepting Real ID friends -- just not, you know, them -- is probably not the friendliest approach. You need to come up with a new line. You could blame it on Real ID: "I'm not confident they've worked out all the privacy kinks yet." You could blame it on exhaustion: "You know, I started friending a few people, and it was just too much chat for me at the end of the day; I've decided to quit using it now." You could even blame your boyfriend (with his permission, of course): "I don't know -- (boyfriend's name) really loves when we play together without anyone else knowing where we are. I'm not sure he'd be happy about having people know when we're trying to escape together online ... I'm holding off on friending people for now."
Whatever (gentle) excuse or honest reason you decide to extend, make it one that doesn't cause others to feel shut out of the clubhouse. And if they end up thinking you're a stodgy old eccentric ... Well, at least you can suffer your grumpiness in relative privacy, no?
The problem with Real ID is that we don't have any protection options other than abstinence. I dream of a future where we laugh at the current privacy issues with this feature. We'll snicker about the lack of an invisible mode and snort when we think about the inability to turn off Friends of Friends. [Update: Blizzard announced earlier today that this will be changing soon.] Until that time, we need to make sure we only go all the way with Real ID friends we trust.
I'm Real ID-promiscuous. I have some standards; I won't just accept any friend invite (unlike Facebook, where I'm an absolute slut), but I do accept invites from people I know. I've warned them that accepting a Real ID request from me means a naughty spreading of real names across the Friends of Friends network. I don't get offended when people decline.
Anonyma, I know that your issue is more about controlling your social interaction, but I do think that citing issues with the Friends of Friends function will serve you better than saying that sometimes you want to be antisocial. Some people take "I would like to play alone or with my boyfriend for a bit" to mean "I don't like you." Their insecurities are not your fault, but they are natural and, unfortunately, common.
I think that the best solution for you is to form a closed Real ID circle with your current Real ID friends. You all agree to the friends in your Real ID circle and make a pact to not invite anyone else without approval of the circle. It sounds like you have pretty much already done that, but formalizing it will help you with your problem as well as make sure you and your Real ID friends are on the same page. You can then tell anyone asking to be your Real ID friend about the closed circle.
You may still have people who get testy, but hopefully it will be lessened with a clear explanation.
Drama Buster of the Week
Suspect Real ID is a real bad idea for you? Learn how to customize your settings or opt out entirely.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Drama Mamas






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Callum Forbes Jul 16th 2010 8:15PM
I will not be, as long as I have the choice, getting into real id or the facebook integration. I love WoW, I hate facebook and social networking in general.
Jorges Jul 16th 2010 10:17PM
Just do what I did:
1 Get into your Bnet account
2 Enable parental controls
3 Click the link on the mail you'll get (don't delete this mail, is your key to parental controls)
4 Save your settings. Real ID is disabled by default.
5 Get in game and play as you always did before Real ID
We never needed Real ID before, we don't need it now.
Callum Forbes Jul 17th 2010 4:38AM
Thanks for the advice, I saw this on WoW.com a few days ago. I'll give it a go when Cataclysm comes out and play my goblin peacefully :)
Truffled Jul 16th 2010 8:26PM
I had a very similar situation happen to me. I ONLY have my real good RL friends that play on other servers and/or live far from me friended through RealID. That's just the way I play. Well, I was chatting with one of my friends (a guy, I'm a girl) and he invited his current GF into the chat. Now I know this person RL, but we aren't that close. After the chat ended and he logged off, she gave me her email and said I could add her, but I didn't. She hasn't said anything, at least not to me, but I sometimes wonder if she got offended that I didn't add her.
Stuart Jul 16th 2010 8:27PM
RealID is like unprotected sex.
Robin, I'm your newest fan.
Gamer am I Jul 16th 2010 8:59PM
Indeed, this is one of the best analogies I have ever heard, in recent memory, at least. Kudos, Robin.
TR Jul 16th 2010 9:28PM
Count me in as fan #2! I love it! Part of me is giddy at it becoming a trope, but the other part is worried it could become Internet Meme of the Day/Month/Year and ruining how cool it really is.
Rob Jul 16th 2010 9:39PM
Complete win, as usual Robin.
uncaringbear Jul 16th 2010 9:54PM
Robin, that is the best analogy ever for RealID.
Wellsee Jul 16th 2010 8:28PM
I have Facebook with lots of friends. I have Twitter, with a smaller collection of friends. I have opted out of RealId as much as I can. My friends and many of my guildmates know who most of my alts are, but I'll be damned if I give away the privacy of logging on with someone else, unbeknownst to them, with the intention of just unwinding in-game alone.
Emerald Jul 16th 2010 8:42PM
There needs to be an 'appear offline' option for Real ID, or some way to temporarily turn it off. Sometimes I just want space from everyone to play an anonymous toon on a random server somewhere and not have to deal with even real life friends. The other day I tried to take a break by turning off 'enable real ID' in parental controls. Big mistake. That removed all my friends from my list, and me from theirs, resulting in several messages later asking me what they'd done to upset me etc.
beth Jul 16th 2010 8:54PM
I was nervous about RealID and was going to avoid it, but one night when playing with real life friends they all decided to add each other. It would have seemed rude if I declined so I agreed. But I really regret it now. Sometimes I just want to get on a character nobody knows about and play on my own. But I can't anymore. Not even on another server.
WOW needs to have an option where you can temporarily opt out of RealID BEFORE you enter a character. Other games I have played had an option where you could choose to have your status listed as off-line even when you were on-line. This (along with turning off friends of friends) could make REal ID a great tool instead a privacy invader.
Aloix Jul 16th 2010 9:04PM
OT, but closing the bathroom door around an SO is a debate? /boggle. I'm not a prude, but toilet use doesn't need to be shared imo.
Keeping it open whilst showering or brushing teeth or applying makeup or shaving, fine.
Just seems a bit crude to leave it open while using the toilet.
Anyway.. on topic, I agree that RealID could really use a 'hide/appear offline' function for those that would use it.
Rob Jul 16th 2010 9:50PM
Yeah idk Xi.
I was on my honeymoon cruise, and the comedian was talking about this (in graphic detail), and his punchline was 'this is when i knew our romance was dead'. Which is kinda funny but true. *boggle*
Gemini Jul 16th 2010 10:41PM
It's all about being completely comfortable around your SO. Intimacy isn't just in the bedroom.
Schwiiing Jul 17th 2010 5:53AM
"It's all about being completely comfortable around your SO. Intimacy isn't just in the bedroom."
Intimacy is fine Gemini, but I have no desire to watch my wife backing one out. Some things in life should ALWAYS remain a mystery.
7Seti Jul 16th 2010 9:08PM
Lisa, that sounds like really bad advice to me. "I only want to use it for real-life friends" is a perfectly reasonable excuse, it's even what Blizzard recommends. If a friend isn't going to respect that, then I doubt lying to them will improve the situation.
Snuzzle Jul 16th 2010 9:49PM
I agree. Lying is never, ever a good idea; even these so-called "white lies" to prevent hurt feelings. This is because, sooner or later, the truth gets out and then you have the double ouch of "wow, not only did she skip off tonight's raid, but she lied about her mom being sick." It takes a long time to rebuild the trust lost from lies, and many online friendships and acquaintances (including guildies) are probably not strong enough to withstand that. If they were already that strong, you'd probably have no qualms about adding them. See the problem?
Now, I'm not saying be blunt and rude, and I'm certainly not saying don't worry about their feelings. There's absolutely nothing wrong with a polite and breezy, "Sorry, but I'm only friending people I know IRL." Adding a little joke like "that way I know whose butt to kick if they abuse it!" couldn't hurt ;)
I know a certain person who likes her privacy and is only RID-friending people she knows won't harass her and bury her in whispers every time she OMGLOGSIN. Personally, I'm only friending people I really trust in-game, which includes 99% of people I've met or know IRL. I've gotten RID snubbed. I've had to RID snub people. I've been tempted to un-RID people who won't stop spamming me with status updates. "I just picked my nose!" Great! No one cares.
If they get offended or mopey that you just happen to not know them IRL... well, did you really want to keep them around anyway? Most reasonable people will understand that it's not personal... just proximity.
Zanathos Jul 16th 2010 10:28PM
Lying is often a good idea. Do you tell your friends their outfits look terrible if they do? Probably not.
kasapina Jul 17th 2010 5:05AM
Zanathos, you missed the point by a mile.