You think half those adults on Facebook are there because they love Facebook? No, no. These are merely parents engaged in covert operations.
(Credit: Sjbiased/YouTube Screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET)
I had always imagined that adults entered the world of Facebook because they wanted to re-enact their teenage years, find a new lover, or “connect” with long-lost relatives whom they never really liked.
Yet a new piece of research has proved mind-altering.
For these vital statistics reveal that American parents aren’t trying to imitate children so much as spy on them.
It’s perfectly well-known that children can be trusted about as much as news stories in Pravda during the Brezhnev era.
So parents feel forced to take the radical step of joining them so that they can beat them. In a psychological sense, you understand.
Indeed, this study suggests that half of all parents sign up with Facebook at least partly in order to see what drugs their kids are taking, who they are consorting with and what they really think about, well, their parents.
An excitable 43 percent of parents admit that they check their kids’ Facebook pages every day.
Some 92 percent of them make it so easy for themselves by openly becoming Facebook friends with their kids.
Some might reach the inevitable conclusion that American parents aren’t very bright.
If they are making it so obvious they are snooping on their kids by friending them, might they not imagine that the kids, in turn, will not express themselves fully on Facebook, instead choosing to go to Tumblr, Instagram, or some other relatively recondite place?
The Education Database Online figures offer that a third of kids would defriend their parents “if they could.”
I, though, am left fascinated as to how much adults are exposing themselves.
Surely the kids — just, you know, for fits and giggles — trawl around their parents’ Facebook pages and speculate as to which of their Facebook friends are former (or even current) lovers.
Surely the kids take a look at these people’s profile pictures and pray that they never, ever end up as wizened and alcohol-sodden as some of them appear.
Given that the kids are far, far more tech savvy than their parents will ever be, might they be far better spies than their parents?
While the adults think they’re being clever in following the kids, I suspect it’s the kids who get more information out of this social-networking exchange — information that they’ll choose to use just when they need it.
Women are more prone to romantic jealousy spurred by Facebook posts on their boyfriend’s wall than men, a new study has found.
Their jealousy increases particularly if they think other people can see that their relationship may be in trouble, researchers from the University of Alabama said.
As many as 226 heterosexual college-age men and women in the US were told to imagine that they had discovered a photo of their partner with a person of the opposite sex on the social networking website Facebook, ‘MyHealthNewsDaily’ reported.
The study participants, during the hypothetical scenario, could view the privacy settings of their boyfriend’s or girlfriend’s Facebook account and thus could see whether the photo was visible to others on Facebook.
Women reported greater feelings of jealousy when they imagined the scenario than did men. They rated their level of jealousy as a six out of a possible nine, compared to a four out of nine for men.
Both women and men reported the greatest level of jealousy if the photo’s privacy settings meant that the photo could not be viewed by other people on Facebook – an indication that their romantic interest was trying to hide something.
If the photo could be seen by other people on Facebook, men’s level of jealousy dropped, while women’s remained high.
Women were also more hurt by the scenario than men if there were relatively few photos of them with their partner on Facebook.
“These findings suggest that the public nature of potential infidelity may influence emotions differently for men and women,” the researchers said.
“Women may experience more negative [emotions] when they believe that others are able to view lack of evidence of being in a committed relationship,” they said.
Other studies have found that people who spend more time on Facebook report greater levels of romantic jealously, and more frequent viewing of their partner’s Facebook profile, than people who spend less time on the social networking site.
According to researchers Facebook also presents people with opportunities to misinterpret information.
Two players of the online music trivia game ‘SongPop’ met each other in the real world and are now engaged to be married.
Millions who love music have flocked to the music trivia game SongPop after seeing it in the music gear reviews. But two random competitors are taking their game to a whole new level: marriage.
Sara DeSpain and Nathan Purdom were playing SongPop on Facebook last summer and struck up an online conversation. After each game session – you hear a series of song clips and try to identify the artist or song faster than the other player – you can send a message to your competitor. They struck up a conversation. Using her profile picture, Purdom found DeSpain on Facebook and sent her a friend request. (Since then SongPop, which can also be played on mobile devices, has added a player locations to the game.)
“That is how it all happened because I was beating him more and more in SongPop so he had to know more about me,” says Sara DeSpain, 33, a self-described SongPop addict who owns a salon and day spa in Savanna, Ill., about 150 miles west of Chicago.
It turns out they lived only about 100 miles from each other, so they decided to meet face to face in September. “We connected immediately and we knew we were the ones for each other,” he says.
Purdom, 37, a surgical technician, proposed on Nov. 29 and DeSpain accepted. They plan to get married in May — they are yet to decide a wedding song. “I am very thankful that SongPop was on Facebook,” he says. “Even though she beats me constantly, we still enjoy playing against one another.”
The game, which is one of the most popular Facebook diversions, can be a place to flirt that was not the case with the couple. “I wasn’t even looking to date anyone and neither was he actually,” she says. “But thank god for SongPop, because I found my soul mate.”
Other games such as World of Warcraft have led to real-world teamups, but this is the first official wedding to be facilitated through SongPop, as far as developer Fresh Planet knows. “We created the game because we love music and the connection it provides- especially when there’s a bit of fun competition in the mix,” says CEO Mathieu Nouzareth, who founded the 16-person New York-based company. “In Sara and Nathan’s case, we were thrilled to hear how it had changed the course of their lives!”
Motor vehicle accident law refers to an area of law that is a hybrid of traffic law and personal injury law. Vehicle vehicles (including trucks) and motorcycles are subject to traffic laws while users of electric personal assistance vehicles are subject to traffic law.
Vehicle accident law, which does not change much, consists of a number of sections.
In certain cases, in addition to motor vehicle accidents, the owner of an parked personal assistance vehicle will be liable for the damages due to this if the owner does not insure the vehicle or did not register it with the DMV within the time required.
Personal assistance vehicle law is simple but can be tricky if you have a problem. If you do not care for the issue and are not trying to manipulate someone, you do not have a case. If you have a real issue, you are not going to get any sympathy here. You are basically asking for an attorney, in addition to being prosecuted. There is no case for this type of situation and the only way I can see is if the car is stolen or if you have a ticket for a traffic violation and no insurance or no registration, in which case you are not going to get anything from an attorney for this.
In some states, personal assistance vehicle laws will get you the same punishment as a traffic ticket. Some states have a maximum fines range for DUI for them.
If you have a mechanical problem with an electric personal assistance vehicle, and it is not a battery or electric system problem, this is probably the most forgiving thing you could possibly be charged for. If you have an electric vehicle problem and a mechanical problem with the vehicle, you may be facing a possible 15 days in jail. These are penalties that could apply in most situations but getting a lawyer can also help you with this from sites such as https://valientemott.com/practice-areas/car-accident-attorney-las-vegas/ online.
For those of us with vehicles that are not classified as electric personal assistance vehicles, there are still some issues to be aware of. Some states have special registration requirements for electric personal assistive vehicles.
Some states have laws requiring liability insurance for drivers of these vehicles that do not have minimum coverage. For states that are subject to these types of laws, you may have to look elsewhere for insurance.
Electric personal assistance vehicles are not included in auto insurance, unless you have the vehicle registered with the DMV. In these states, auto insurance rates are usually higher than a reasonable percentage of the vehicle’s actual value. Do not put your own life and property at risk with an electric vehicle. The typical real estate agent might charge a lot more than that.
It is important to check your state’s laws if you are thinking about buying an electric vehicle. If you are having any type of problem with it, do not buy it. If you believe you have been overcharged, this is a thing that you need to be prepared to pay for. If you do not want to buy one, don’t buy one. It is something you could have resolved with the dealer if you knew what you were doing.
What type of insurance will I need? In addition to requiring auto insurance for all owners of electric personal assistance vehicles, some states have additional laws that govern these vehicles and their owners. For example, some states require the drivers of these vehicles to obtain specific coverage for injuries of the passengers and/or passengers of the owner and/or a designated passenger of the vehicle. This requires an extra policy to cover these people.
SEO can help you build better relationships with your audience and improve the customer experience. In the next steps, I’ll discuss how to create a blog post that takes advantage of the blog-loop to get more traffic for your content.
As mentioned earlier, this process is an iterative one, where you make some minor adjustments based on what you’ve learned. The specific adjustments that you make to your content and your blog post will depend on your own niche. If you’re not satisfied with your SEO results after you’re done, don’t feel bad, there’s plenty of time to improve things later.
The Key Word
If you’re reading this post, chances are good you are following a content marketing strategy. Whether it’s a search engine optimization process, blogging approach, or SEO strategy, a content strategy helps you get the highest quality traffic for your content.
That said, it is important that you understand the goals of your content strategy before you begin. In this post, we will consider five keywords you could use to test your blog content strategy.
Blogger
Even though these keywords are simply “blogger”, you don’t need to worry about them too much. A Google-powered blog won’t cost you much. Most major search engines will return pages with at least one of these words.
As you might guess, for SEO purposes, you need to consider these keywords. This is because the keyword will start indexing and ranking well as soon as you add them to your website, if you want to learn more about this, find out here what you should do in SEO.
What is SEO, SEO and more SEO?
Search Engine Optimization, or SEO, is the practice of using the best ranking signals to make sure your website ranks in the top spots for relevant keywords.
What is great about SEO is that it will increase your traffic and your sales.
But, SEO isn’t just about increasing your traffic and sales, it’s also about improving your website’s health. Without a solid knowledge of SEO, you will not reap the full benefits of having a great website.
In this guide, we will give you everything you need to know about what SEO is, how to think about and implement a great SEO strategy, and a step-by-step guide on how to accomplish SEO in your blog.
So what are we going to cover?
SEO Competitor Research
Before you get started on your SEO strategy, you need to have a very good idea of what you are up against. Fortunately, SEO is a multi-dimensional process. Just like in any other industry, you need to be making it possible for users of your site to find what they need.
If your site has a small audience, you won’t be able to do a lot of SEO on your own. The most effective approach would be to partner with a reputable blog and host your content there.
However, if your audience is very large or if you just have a ton of content, you may need to do some extra legwork on your own. You will need to learn how to find a keyword in your niche that has similar ranking signals to your blog posts.
It seems that there is a mobile phone application for everything — from financial transactions to multi-player games. Now, you can use your smartphone for psychological testing.
Scientists in Norway have developed an app that is similar to a program psychologists use in the lab to measure brain function. A listener hears two different syllables in each ear at the same time, and says which one sounds the clearest. According to research team member Josef Bless, “the test indicates which side of the brain is most active during language processing.”
More than 1,000 people have downloaded the free app, and half have sent their test results to the researchers.
“The results from the app were as reliable as those of the controlled lab tests,” says Bless. He expects to see more psychological research teams using mobile apps to collect data.
The researchers have also developed a version of the software for people who suffer from auditory hallucinations. The scientists say the mobile app helps patients learn to ignore the voices in their head.
If there’s anyone left in the world who thinks online bullying isn’t as harmful as the physical kind that happens live and in person, a new Michigan State University study says that it’s not just as bad – it’s worse.
“We should not ignore one form of bullying for the sake of the other,” Thomas Holt, an associate professor of criminal justice and one of the study’s authors, said in a release. “The results suggest we should find ways to develop school policies to combat bullying within the school environment and then figure out how to translate that to the home, because the risk goes beyond the schoolyard.”
The study, published in the International Criminal Justice Review, looked at data from more than 3,000 students in grades 3 through 11 in Singapore. The survey data found that 27 per cent of students who were bullied online skipped school or thought about skipping compared with 28 per cent who were sent bullying text messages and 22 per cent who were physically bullied.
As well, students who were bullied online were more likely to report suicidal thoughts – 28 per cent compared with 22 per cent – than students who were physically bullied. Of those students bullied through cellphones, 26 per cent reported suicidal thoughts.
After B.C. teen Amanda Todd committed suicide last fall, Canada’s justice and public safety ministers said that while there are some provisions in the Criminal Code to fight cyberbullying, more needs to be done to deal the problem.
Last month, the Senate’s human rights committee called for a unified, national strategy to fight cyberbullying.
Parents should carefully monitor what their kids are doing online, Holt said, and must also “carefully educate their children on the risk of bullying victimization via mobile phones and ensure that they can speak to one or both parents about negative experiences.”
“It’s one of those unpleasant things,” she told Confidential.
Kerr, who will leave Australia for New Zealand tomorrow following a ten day business trip, is said to be working with senior members of the fraud and cyber crime squad.
She took to social media yesterday to condemn the attack, tweeting: “Just with the cyber crime unit. Whoever hacked my account, expect a knock on the door very soon.” The secure GCP cloud technology is what one needs to fight against cyber attacks by hackers. One should take proper measures and awareness to stop OT cyber threats.
At a breakfast launch at The Pacific in Bondi today, the 29-year-old said she signed on for her latest ambassadorship role after trialling the shampoo and conditioner products for “just over a month”.
“I was looking for something that really gave volume and height to my hair and that didn’t weigh it down,” she said.
While usually opting for organic products, Kerr said it wasn’t possible to be all-organic all the time.
“It’s a balance. Like I have to wear make-up everyday for work and obviously that’s not organic – it’s whatever that make-up artist has on that particular day,” she said.
“But on my days off, I don’t do my hair and I just wear Kora Organics tinted moisturiser. You just balance it out where you can.”
Internet service providers explain what South Africa’s RICA law requires of them
Internet service providers (ISPs) in South Africa must be able to divert a user’s traffic to an “interception point” on-demand as a requirement of RICA,Cybersmart CEO Laurie Fialkov recently told MyBroadband.
The Regulation of Interception of Communications and Provision of Communication-Related Information Act (RICA) was gazetted in 2003 and, after a number of extensions, service providers finally had to fully implement it by June 2011.
Part of the demands RICA places on ISPs, Fialkov added, is that they must be able to see what a user is connecting to, as well as broad classification of what the traffic is.
“For instance we can tell if it is adult content or video streaming or e-mail,” Fialkov said.
This type of interception may only happen when a person in law enforcement receives permission to do so, however.
Fialkov highlighted sections of RICA which specify that only retired judges, or a judge of a High Court not in active service may grant a “direction” to this effect.
This is the only way they are able to inspect a user’s traffic, Fialkov said, as they don’t store any information about which URLs or IPs users connect to.
Laurie Fialkov
Franco Barbalich from Axxess and Derek Hershaw from Mweb reiterated this, saying that they don’t store specific data about their subscriber’s Internet usage.
“At an individual user level we track total usage so that we can apply capping and so on,” explained Hershaw, who is head of Mweb ISP. This is for Mweb’s capped user-base.
Mweb also tracks the network protocols and services that are used by its subscribers at an aggregate level, Hershaw said. This is to do traffic management and shaping.
Asked how this data is stored and who has access, Hershaw said that it is secure.
“We treat it the same way as all our customer information, he said. “In terms of the aggregated data we are referring to here, only a small group of staff who do our traffic management [has access].”
Credit Courtesy of Sherry Turkle Sherry Turkle is a professor of the social studies of science and technology at MIT.
For Valentine’s Day, maybe you’ll post a photo of your loved one on Facebook, tweet out a love poem or text-message your secret crush. But as we make those virtual connections, are we missing something?
Weekend Edition Sunday is exploring a few of the places in our lives where technology can actually drive us apart and make real intimacy tough: in our romantic relationships, with our kids, even in the workplace.
So how did we get here? Sherry Turkle has thought a lot about this. She’s a professor of the social studies of science and technology at MIT. On the one hand, she says, barriers broken online can help people connect with others more deeply. But in hundreds of interviews about communications, the phrase Turkle hears the most is: “I’d rather text than talk.”
“We’re also moving into a world where we’re truncating our communications, making them briefer and briefer, where sometimes we’re willing to sacrifice conversation for mere connection,” she tells Rachel Martin, host of Weekend Edition.
There are benefits to backing off from confrontation, Turkle acknowledges. Some couples use email to fight, giving themselves time to cool down.
“On the other hand, there’s something very useful about learning how to be in a conversation where you have strong feelings and to experience someone else’s anger and your own and to control your feelings but to experience the humanity,” says Turkle, author of Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology And Less from Each Other.
Technology, Turkle says, can be a way of making relationships “less messy.” For example, when a teenager tries to get out of dinner with his grandparents, sending a text is less involved than calling.
“In other words, that sense that someone is waiting for him, that there’s expectations, that there’s human desire and expectation here,” she says. “And that’s what we’re getting out of. We just type, ‘I’m not coming.’ Send.”
Turkle is not arguing that we wistfully look back on the Internet-free days of the past.
“I’m arguing that if you want to put intimate conversation in your life, you need to leave a little space for it,” she says.
“We all get to keep our phones and love our phones, but now that we’re into a more mature use of the technology, we also need to be able to say, ‘For this conversation, we need to talk.’ ”
Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
Transcript
RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:
Valentine’s Day is coming up this week. Maybe you’ll post a photo of your loved one on Facebook, tweet out a love poem or text message your secret crush. There’s no doubt that our level of connectedness through smartphones and social media has made it a whole lot easier to reach out and touch those we love – at least virtually. But is there a downside to all this connectedness? Throughout the program today, we’re going to explore a few of the places in our lives where technology can actually drive us apart and make real intimacy tough. In our romantic relationships…
ALEXANDRA SAMUEL: I’d like to say we do say hello to each other face to face before we switch on any devices.
MARTIN: …with our kids.
SUE JORDAN: Why do you have this phone, David? Tell me why you don’t have your nice new phone.
DAVID JORDAN: Oh, I left it in my pocket and went down to the laundry room…
JORDAN: And?
JORDAN: …it went in the washer.
MARTIN: …even in the workplace.
SHAYNE HUGHES: Email is this tool that is quite powerful and it’s really embedded in how we do work.
MARTIN: So, how did we get here? Sherry Turkle has thought a lot about this. She’s a professor of social studies of science and technology at MIT, and we asked her if our digital devices make us more or less capable of real communication.
SHERRY TURKLE: Well, the answer to that question is – it’s complicated. So many people have shared with me their stories of how unburdened by bodies, social status, age-height-weight. A certain deeper truth about themselves comes out to another person they’d met online. But at the same time, I think as we live in a culture where increasingly I’d rather text than talk, after interviewing hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people about their current communications, that’s the phrase that I get most. We’re also moving into a world where we’re truncating our communications, making them briefer and briefer, where sometimes we’re willing to sacrifice conversation for mere connection.
MARTIN: Isn’t there though an argument that would say, you know, I can fly off the handle in person in one-on-one, face-to-face interactions, especially if it’s over something that’s tense, that’s confrontational, and that maybe it’s beneficial to take a deep breath and write an email, where I can be more deliberate and choose my words carefully.
TURKLE: Yes, absolutely. I’ve interviewed many husbands and wives actually who say that they prefer to do their fighting over email because they can have that cool-down. And that’s an interesting use of the technology. I don’t want to say that inventive people who are self-reflective about can use email constructively. On the other hand, there’s something very useful about learning how to be in a conversation where you have strong feelings and to experience someone else’s anger and your own, and to control your feelings but to experience the humanity…
MARTIN: And the messiness of that.
TURKLE: …and the messiness. And we’re sort of cleaning up human relationships and making them less messy. For example, kids today really don’t know how to apologize. I have a great example of a young boy about 13 who wants to get out of dinner with his grandmother and he wants to just send a message: not coming to dinner – send. And his father says to him – because they live in the same neighborhood – you go over and tell her you’re not coming to dinner, or you at least call. Because when he calls, he’s going to hear the grandmother say, but I’ve put the chicken in the oven. Your grandfather is waiting to hear about what you’re doing at school. In other words, that sense that someone is waiting for him. That there’s expectations, that there’s human desire and expectation here. And that’s what we’re getting out of. We just type: I’m not coming – send.
MARTIN: I mean, we all do that, right? It’s a lot easier to just write an email really quickly and say, sorry, can’t make it.
TURKLE: Exactly. And I think that that’s the kind of thing where we’re sort of taking shortcuts and we’re shortchanging ourselves.
MARTIN: But you’re not arguing that we wistfully look back on years past and a different time. We live in the world we live in with the devices and technology we have and it improves our lives immeasurably in many ways. You’re a busy working mom. I imagine you use technology.
TURKLE: All the time. I’m not arguing any kind of retro position. I’m arguing that if you want to put intimate conversation in your life, you need to leave a little space for it. It is not a luddite thing to say or it is not a retro thing to say. I love texting you. I love keeping in touch with text. But for this conversation, we really need to talk. We all get to keep our phones and love our phones. But now we’re into a more mature use of the technology, we also need to be able to say for this conversation we need to talk.
MARTIN: Sherry Turkle is a professor of social studies of science and technology at MIT. Sherry, thanks so much for talking with us.
TURKLE: My pleasure. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.