<p>They only look at your FB if you let them. Set your privacy settings to Friends Only.</p>
<p>My FB is completely clean. Also FB does not allow anyone that isn’t my friend or friend of a friend to see my profile since im under 18</p>
<p>It’s just google that I’m worried about.</p>
<p>[How</a> does privacy work for minors? - Facebook Help Center | Facebook](<a href=“http://www.facebook.com/help/?faq=16397]How”>http://www.facebook.com/help/?faq=16397)</p>
<p>They aren’t necessarily going to google your name per se. But if Suzy claims to have won "X Big Deal " or some such, it’s easy to google “X BIG Deal” to see what it is and who won it.</p>
<p>Unless your posts on various media were written in an offensive fashion, you don’t have much to worry about. Even if the posts were found, the adcoms won’t care as much about what you say as about how you said it…unless your were offensive or boorish. They want all spectrums of opinions on campus, but they don’t want boors.</p>
<p>I can’t say I haven’t used colorful language. I am not claiming to have won anything etc.</p>
<p>Also can’t googeling an applicant lead an adcom to see info he isn’t allowed to consider?</p>
<p>
This statement is so funny to me, ahaha. I don’t know why.</p>
<p>Anyways. The answer is NO, colleges / adcoms simply do not have time to google every single applicant that applies.
Unless, however, that college is Stanford or the University of California schools – in which they have been known to randomly audit applicants (Stanford during the REA round).</p>
<p>If you participated in an EC that won’t make or break your application, then you really have nothing to worry about.</p>
<p>Nope. In fact I haven’t done an EC all my time in HS ■■■■■!</p>
<p>When Matt Drudge used to have a radio show he always said “the google,” somehow that stuck lol</p>