There is nothing like an early spring to make you think baseball. And this is an early spring. The azaleas have just finished and the amaryllis and day lilies are a few days from busting out, but I digress. MLB has just issued a social media policy and it seems the most traditional of the professional sports leagues has gone progressive and actually encourages players to use social media to communicate directly with fans. The policy was embraced by the new collective bargaining agreement between MLB and the MLBPA. Bullet points courtesy of Greg Calcaterra at Hardball Talk:
- Players can’t make what can be construed as official club or league statements without permission;
- Players can’t use copyrighted team logos and stuff without permission or tweet confidential or private information about teams or players, their families, etc.;
- Players can’t link to any MLB website or platform from social media without permission; (i don't get this)
- No tweets condoning or appearing to condone the use of substances on the MLB banned drug list
- No ripping umpires or questioning their integrity;
- No racial, sexist, homophobic, anti-religious, etc. etc. content;
- No harassment or threats of violence;
- Nothing sexually explicit;
- Nothing otherwise illegal.