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London Muzzles Its Olympic Volunteers Ahead of the Summer Games

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London may be setting up Europe’s largest Wi-Fi network ahead of the Summer Olympics but it’ll do a fat lot of good for the Games’ 70,000 volunteers since they’re effectively banned from using social media during the event. Like, at all.

The London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG), the organization responsible for mobilizing the 70,000 volunteers laid out its new social media rules for its army of unpaid workers. The prohibitions state that workers are to:

not to disclose their location

not to post a picture or video of Locog backstage areas closed to the public

not to disclose breaking news about an athlete

not to tell their social network about a visiting VIP, eg an athlete, celebrity or dignitary

not to get involved in detailed discussion about the Games online

Luckily, these volunteers will be allowed to retweet “official London 2012 postings” as much as they like. So that basically eliminates, FourSquare check-in’s, geo-tagged Facebook photos, any sort of Tweet, and potentially even Linked-In profile updates.

According to Andy Hunt, chief of the British Olympic Association, “The International Olympic Committee themselves are really pushing the use of social media and we support that.” Just not if you aren’t being paid to be there. [ForbesBBC News]

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