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September 4, 2010

Search Results Tag: Facebook

May 31, 2010

Surprise! Young Users Protect Their Privacy Online

by Author — Categories: Security, Social Networks — Tags: , , Comments Off

Surprise! Young Users Protect Their Privacy Online.


When adults talk about personal privacy on sites like Facebook, someone is bound to contend that that young people are too self-absorbed, or too naive to care about securing personal information that’s stored in various places stored online.

Well, according to a study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, that person is likely wrong.

The Pew survey of 2,253 Americans found that people aged 18 to 29 are more likely than older adults to take steps to limit others from accessing their personal informationonline. The study results, released Wednesday, noted that 44% of younger adults try to protect their information, compared to 33% of users between 30 and 49, and 25% of those between 50 and 64.

“Search engines and social media sites now play a central role in building one’s identity online,” said Mary Madden, a senior research specialist at Pew, in a statement. “Many users are learning and refining their approach as they go, changing privacy settings on profiles, customizing who can see certain updates and deleting unwanted information about them that appears online.”

And she added that people have a misperception about how vigilant younger users are.

“Contrary to the popular perception that younger users embrace a laissez-faire attitude about their online reputations, young adults are often more vigilant than older adults when it comes to managing their online identities,” said Madden.

The survey found that 71% of younger users of social networks have changed the privacy settings on their profiles to limit what is shared with others, while only 55% of social networkers between the ages of 50 and 64 have changed their default settings.

Younger users also are more likely to delete unwanted comments from their social networking pages, and to remove their names from photos that their friends have posted, the survey found.

The Pew report is based on telephone interviews conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International.

Online privacy has increasingly become a hot button issue , especially in social networking circles.

Last week, Facebook rolled out new, simpler privacy controls in an attempt to appease users of the social network who had grown angry and frustrated over their inability to limit who has access to personal information posted on the site.

The unrest among users had escalated in recent months apparently prompted many to at leastconsider quitting Facebook .

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Surprise! Young Users Protect Their Privacy Online.

Surprise! Young Users Protect Their Privacy Online.

Surprise! Young Users Protect Their Privacy Online.

Surprise! Young Users Protect Their Privacy Online.

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January 21, 2010

Bill Gates Rejoins Facebook, Gives Twitter A Try Too

by Author — Categories: News, Social Networks — Tags: , , Comments Off
Bill Gates

Bill Gates

Last summer, Microsoft founder Bill Gates made the somewhat surprising announcement that he was quitting Facebook after being inundated with friend requests, explaining “It was just way too much trouble so I gave it up”. Today, it looks like he’s decided to give it another go. A few hours ago, Gates launched both a new Facebook Page and a Twitter account (@BillGates).

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December 26, 2009

Should Employers Ban Facebook at Work?

by Author — Categories: Social Networks — Tags: Comments Off
Should employers ban access to social networking sites like Facebook at work? If you look at the potential security risks alone, the answer would be resounding yes for most enterprises. Aside from the security risk, there’s the huge hit that social networking has had on employee productivity. One estimate — from IT consulting company Morse — figures employee use of social-networking sites cost employers $2.25 billion a year in lost productivity.

Yet even with the productivity and security challenges caused by social media, there is no still easy answer to the Facebook ban question. There are, however, plenty of opinions and guidelines that can help your company make a sound decision around the use of social networking from 9 to 5.

First, it helps to consider how other small businesses as well CIOs at large companies are handling the social-networking phenomenon. More than half of CIOs in a Robert Half Technology survey said their firms don’t allow employees to visit social-networking sites for any reason while at work.

“Using social-networking sites may divert employees’ attention away from more pressing priorities, so it’s understandable that some companies limit access,” said Dave Willmer, executive director of Robert Half Technology. “For some professions, however, these sites can be leveraged as effective business tools, which may be why about one in five companies allows their use for work-related purposes.”

The Case for At-Work Facebooking

Public-relations and marketing firms — or PR and marketing divisions within larger enterprises — are among those who believe employees should be able to update their Facebook status at work.

As a PR firm, social media is a way of life for HMA Public Relations. Abbie Fink, vice president and general manager of the firm, said social networking is a critical component of how the company does business. In fact, she added, clients expect the…

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