May 4 2009

White House Joins Facebook, MySpace, Twitter

theodp writes “The official White House Blog called the move WhiteHouse 2.0 as the Obama administration unveiled its membership in a trio of the social-networking leaders: Facebook (157,606 fans and counting), MySpace (174,817 friends and counting) and Twitter (34,612 followers and counting).”

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May 2 2009

Twitter Map Tracks Swine Flu Tweets in Real Time

What do you get when you cross swine flu with Twitter, the social networking service much loved (and hated) for its rapid-fire 140-character updates known as tweets? No, it’s not a chatty new virus called Switter.

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May 1 2009

Pirate Party Banned from Social Networking Site

StudiVZ is a Facebook-style operation and it’s Germany’s largest web-based social networking site. With the European Parliament elections in sight, the website recently opened up to established political parties for election campaigning. Not for all parties though, as they chose to ban the Pirate Party.

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May 1 2009

Pirate Party Banned From Social Networking Site

An anonymous reader writes to tell us that as the European Parliament elections loom, StudiVZ, Germany’s largest social networking site, has opened up to political parties for election campaigning. That is, if you aren’t the Pirate Party. “The other political parties were allowed to have a special account to show they are an organization and not an individual. The Pirate Party, however, was not allowed to have one and instead operated on a standard user account registered by an individual. StudiVZ noticed that the Pirate Party account was not a “real person” and despite it having a thriving network with hundreds of followers, it was summarily deleted. This means that it is impossible for the Pirate Party to have a presence at all on the largest social networking site in Germany.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Apr 30 2009

Microsoft goes social

The software giant thinks it can make money in social networking the old-fashioned way – charging subscription fees. By Jessi Hempel, writer NEW YORK (Fortune) — Facebook might have a larger audience than the population of Brazil (200 million users vs …

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Apr 29 2009

Facebook Has Twitter Envy – But Why?

It is no secret that Facebook has Twitter envy. The number one social networking site is not content to win over rival MySpace. It is not satisfied being far ahead of Google on the social web. Facebook now has Twitter firmly in its crosshairs.

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Apr 29 2009

Using the Internet To Subvert Democracy

david_adams writes “All the recent talk about various polls and elections being pranked or hijacked, serious and silly alike, prompted me to write an article about the technical realities behind online polling, and the political fallout of ever becoming subject to online voting for serious elections. Even if we were to be able to limit voting to legitimate, legal voters, the realities of social networking and the rise of Internet-based movements would dramatically alter the political landscape if online voting were to become commonplace.”

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Apr 28 2009

Social Networking Sites Getting Risky For Recruiting

onehitwonder writes “While many recruiters and HR managers are taking advantage of the Web and online social networks to screen candidates for positions inside their organizations, a bank in Texas has decided that using social networking websites in its recruiting process is too risky legally. Amegy Bank of Texas now prohibits internal HR staff and external recruiters from using social networking sites in its hiring process. Amegy’s decision to ban the use of social networking sites in its hiring process demonstrates its respect for prospective employees’ privacy. It also sends a message to the employers and recruiters using social networks to snoop into job seekers’ personal lives that their actions border on discrimination and could get them in a lot of legal trouble.”

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Apr 26 2009

Cybersquatting and Social Media

Earthquake Retrofit writes “Brian Krebs has a story about cybersquatting on social networking sites. He cites cases of people being impersonated and reports: ‘A site called knowem.com allows you to see whether your name or whatever nickname you favor is already registered at any of some 120 social networking sites on the Web today. For a .95 fee, the site will register all available accounts on your behalf, a manual process that it says takes one to five business days. Whether anyone could possibly use and maintain 120 different social networking accounts is beyond my imagination. I would think an automated signup service like knowem.com would be far more useful if there was also a service that people could use to simultaneously update all of these sites with the same or slightly different content.’ Is it time to saddle up for a new round of Internet land grabs?” A Schneier blog post earlier this month pointed out a related story about how not establishing yourself on social sites, combined with the frequent lack of validation for friend requests, can provide identity thieves with a tempting target .

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apr 25 2009

Charities see potential, risk with social networks

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. – Meredith Bowen was getting tired of requests from Facebook friends to exchange make-believe pansies, daffodils and tiny cartoon characters for her “(Lil) Green Patch,” a virtual garden that sprouted on her social-networking page about a year ago.

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