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Floyd
devakas
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    Millions log off of Facebook

    devakas
    devakas


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    Millions log off of Facebook Empty Millions log off of Facebook

    Post  devakas Tue Jun 14, 2011 6:28 pm


    Millions log off of Facebook

    source
    http://rt.com/usa/news/log-facebook-report-growth/


    If you thought that maybe you’ve been losing friends as of late, don’t worry—you’re not the only one. A recent report alleges that the number of Facebook users across the US, UK and Canada is dropping dramatically.
    According to an analysis conducted by the website Inside Facebook, the social networking site is losing users at an astronomical rate; six million Americans are said to have deactivated their accounts in the month of May alone.
    Speaking to the Daily Mail, Inside Facebook’s Eric Eldon says that there is a “natural saturation” limit that Facebook can reach in any locale. “By the time Facebook reaches around 50 percent of the total population in a given country, growth generally slows to a halt,” he says. Facebook execs announced earlier this year that half of the population of UK had created user accounts, but Eldon’s figures say that more than 100,000 Brits stopped using their website last month. 1.5 million Canadians stopped logging on as well, as did users in Russia and Norway.
    Facebook itself has since questioned Eldon’s analysis, saying that the information extracted from their advertising tools used in Eldon’s report isn’t designed as a source for tracking the overall growth of the site.
    “We are very pleased with our growth and with the way people are engaged with Facebook,” reads a statement, which claims that more than half of Facebook’s active users log on in any given day.

    Facebook disputes Eldon’s analysis and claims that it saw a 21 percent growth for US users during May, at least according to the measurement firm comScore.
    Other analysts support the saturation theory, however, saying that all of those who want a Facebook account in much of the western world already have one. From there, the only action a user can do is shut their profile down. Internet psychologist Graham Jones says to the Daily Mail that “People get terribly excited about something new and after a while the novelty wears off.”
    “In all aspects of our lives we are addicted to novelty, so Facebook should be the same,” Jones adds.
    Facebook has grown from 100 million users in 2008 to over 600 million today. While users may be abandoning their accounts in North America, the company is seeing growth elsewhere as of late. Mexico, Brazil, India, Indonesia and the Philippines all saw an increase in user profiles during the same period that Inside Facebook notes a drop in US, UK and Canadian users. The report also notes that each of those countries were early adopters of the site.
    Floyd
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    Post  Floyd Tue Jun 14, 2011 6:31 pm

    I hope farmville takes a knocking
    Mercuriel
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    Post  Mercuriel Wed Jun 15, 2011 9:47 am

    Facebook and Twitter - Good Riddance IMO...

    But then thats just My 2 Cents...

    Heh heh


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    devakas
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    Post  devakas Fri Oct 21, 2011 5:44 pm

    How to find out everything that Facebook *really* knows about you


    Max Schrems, a 24-year-old law student from Vienna, a meticulous document requester and researcher, is now sitting on a pile of 1,200 pages that comprise his personal-data Facebook dossier.
    He secured the data by using a European requirement that entities with data about individuals make it available to those individuals if they request it.
    After Mr. Schrems made the request, Facebook handed over a CD containing data that’s now fueling 22 complaints that the law student has filed against Facebook with the Irish Data Protection Commissioner (according to Facebook, European users have a relationship with the Irish Facebook subsidiary).
    * Pokes: Retained even after a user removes them.
    * Shadow Profiles: Facebook is collecting data about people without their knowledge, using it to substitute existing profiles and to create profiles of non-users.
    * Tags: Used without specific user consent. Users have to "untag" themselves (opt-out).
    * Synchronizing: Facebook is gathering personal data - e.g., via its iPhone app or the "friend finder" - and using it without the consent of the data subjects.
    * Deleted Postings: Postings that have been deleted showed up in the set of data Mr. Schrems received from Facebook.
    * Postings on other Users' Pages: Users can't see the settings under which content is distributed that they post on other's pages.
    * Messages: Messages, including Chat Messages, are stored by Facebook even after the user deletes them. This means that all direct communication on Facebook can never be deleted.

    Here are the steps on how you can request your personal data from Facebook:
    1. Open this site: https://www.facebook.com/help/contact.php?show_form=data_requests
    2. Enter your personal information
    3. Make a reference to the following law:
    "Section 4 DPA + Art. 12 Directive 95/46/EG"
    4. Click on "Send"
    Facebook cried uncle, sending an email claiming that it could not comply with the requests within a 40-day period.
    In addition to filing the complaints, Mr. Schrems has worked to bring together a crowd of like-minded individuals with the Europe Vs. Facebook website, and setting up a YouTube channel.
    Of course, a Facebook page, Europe vs. Facebook, has also been created. The page had 447 members as of this posting.
    Remember how Mark Zuckerberg, in the early days of creating Facebook, called users dumb f*cks for trusting him with their private information?



    Source
    fjcamper
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    Post  fjcamper Fri Oct 21, 2011 6:50 pm

    Last thing I remember, I was
    Running for the door
    I had to find the passage back
    To the place I was before
    'Relax,' said the night man,
    'We are programmed to receive.
    You can check-out any time you like,
    But you can never leave!'

    The Floyd
    Carol
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    Post  Carol Fri Oct 21, 2011 7:15 pm

    It's bad enough that emails and skype can be monitored. Why post more personal info via Facebook? Just type your telephone number into google and see what pops up. Surprised? Almost any public info is now global info.


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    It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.

    With deepest respect ~ Aloha & Mahalo, Carol
    TRANCOSO
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    Post  TRANCOSO Fri Oct 21, 2011 7:52 pm

    Web 2.0 Summit: Self Expression through Social Media - Chris Poole


      Current date/time is Fri May 10, 2024 2:16 pm