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MoD tells British troops: Go forth and Twitter

New digital guidelines encourage army to get involved with social media and "enjoy yourself"

Tags: army, twitter, troops, mod

By Jennifer Guevin

Published: 10 August 2009 09:00 GMT

As professional organisations become increasingly guarded about employees' use of social networks, British troops are actually being encouraged to use social media to talk about what they do - within limits, of course.

The Ministry of Defence has issued its Online Engagement Guidelines (PDF), 13 pages of recommendations for keeping in touch with friends and family via blogs, social networks, virtual worlds, and multiplayer games without endangering military personnel and activities. The statement says, "Current and emerging internet technologies, such as simple self-publishing, sharing of user-generated content, and social networking, are of growing importance to Service and MoD civilian personnel in their personal and professional lives."

The guidelines also say service and MoD civilian personnel are free to talk about what they do for a living, so long as the content regards "factual, unclassified, uncontroversial non-operational matters."

They must gain authorisation from their chain of command if they wish to publish anything that relates to military operations, gives opinions about Armed Forces' activities, speaks on behalf of the service, or discusses "controversial, sensitive, or political matters". The guidelines even suggest that some employees should consider creating officially sponsored online presences to help communicate their work to the public.

Amid a litany of advice about what information should and should not be divulged under varying circumstances, the guide also reminds people to have a little fun, saying "Enjoy yourself. You have a great story to tell, and are the best person to tell it."

The announcement comes as the US Marine Corps, and organisations including sports broadcaster ESPN and some professional sports teams have put limits on how employees can use social media networks - if not banned the sites altogether.

Original article: British military encouraged to get online from CNET News.com

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