[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"external-lt-301":3},{"payload":4,"id":45,"user":46,"level":52,"course":53,"activity":54,"activity_slug":55,"title":6,"topic":56,"tone":57,"stats":58,"created":61,"score":62,"is_favorite":63,"public":64,"is_external":64},{"text":5,"title":6,"answers":7,"questions":38},"Social media platforms were originally designed to help people stay in touch, but they now influence how we work, shop, learn and even form opinions. For many users, posting a photo or commenting on a news story feels harmless. Yet the risks are not limited to obvious problems such as hacking. They also include slower, less visible consequences that appear only after months or years of routine online behaviour.\n\nOne of the most common misunderstandings is the belief that privacy settings provide complete protection. While these settings can reduce who sees a post, they do not remove the possibility of screenshots, re-sharing, or data being stored by the platform itself. In addition, a user may carefully control their own profile while forgetting that friends can tag them in photos or mention them in public comments. As a result, people sometimes reveal more than they intended without ever typing the information directly.\n\nA second risk involves identity and trust. Online profiles can be created in minutes, and a convincing account does not guarantee a real person with honest intentions. Some users present themselves as students, professionals or potential employers in order to gain credibility. Once trust is established, they may request personal details, encourage private conversations, or offer opportunities that sound attractive but are designed to take money or information. The danger is increased by the fact that social media communication often feels informal, which can lower a person’s natural caution.\n\nThere is also a financial dimension. Fraud on social media is not always dramatic; it can be subtle. A link to a “limited-time offer” may lead to a fake website that collects card details. A message from a “friend” may actually come from a hacked account asking for urgent help. Even legitimate advertising can be problematic when it is highly targeted. If a platform knows a user’s habits, location and interests, it can show adverts at moments when the user is most likely to act impulsively.\n\nBeyond security and money, social media can affect reputation. Employers and universities increasingly check public online content, and a post that seemed funny at the time may appear irresponsible later. Deleting content is not always effective, because copies may exist elsewhere or because search engines may keep older versions. This is why many experts recommend a simple test: do not post anything you would be uncomfortable explaining in a professional interview.\n\nNone of this means that social media must be avoided. It does mean that users should treat it as a public space rather than a private diary. The safest approach is to share less personal information, verify identities before trusting messages, and pause before clicking links or reacting emotionally. Used thoughtfully, social media can be useful; used carelessly, it can create problems that are difficult to undo.","The Hidden Costs of Sharing",{"1":8,"2":13,"3":18,"4":23,"5":28,"6":33},[9,10,11,12],"Posting online is harmless if you avoid commenting on news.","Some negative effects develop gradually and are not immediately obvious.","The main danger is that accounts will always be hacked.","Social media only affects how people communicate with friends.",[14,15,16,17],"They are unnecessary if you never accept friend requests.","They prevent anyone from taking screenshots of your posts.","They can limit visibility but cannot guarantee that information will not spread or be stored.","They automatically stop friends from tagging you.",[19,20,21,22],"Because social media messages are always monitored by employers.","Because informal language online is illegal in many countries.","Because most users are dishonest about their qualifications.","Because convincing profiles can be used to gain confidence and then exploit users for details or money.",[24,25,26,27],"All limited-time offers on social media are illegal.","A hacked account may impersonate a friend and request urgent assistance.","Targeted adverts always force users to buy things.","Banks refuse to refund any online payments made through adverts.",[29,30,31,32],"Because copies or cached versions may remain even after the original is removed.","Because platforms delete all posts automatically after a few years.","Because jokes are always interpreted positively by interviewers.","Because employers are not allowed to view public profiles.",[34,35,36,37],"To advertise privacy software for social media users.","To argue that social media should be banned for everyone.","To encourage careful, informed use of social media by outlining several realistic risks.","To prove that employers are the main cause of online problems.",{"1":39,"2":40,"3":41,"4":42,"5":43,"6":44},"What does the writer suggest about the risks of social media in the first paragraph?","What is the main point about privacy settings in the second paragraph?","Why can trust be risky on social media, according to the third paragraph?","What example of financial risk is mentioned in the fourth paragraph?","Why might deleting a post not fully solve a reputation problem, according to the fifth paragraph?","What is the writer’s overall purpose in the text?",301,{"id":47,"username":48,"first_name":49,"last_name":50,"image":51},21056,"ale-r","Ale","R","https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a/ACg8ocK2cNGl90joRz8l_Nb_tzKCm9QKBmP8-5jZNkLNzNUcaqN7uw=s96-c","B2","Reading","Long Text","long-text","Create an exercise about social media risks","Formal",{"times_played":59,"num_favorites":60},0,1,"2026-04-12T21:01:14",null,false,true]