More Proof: Facebook for the Rich, MySpace for the Poor - 0 views
Nackt im Netz: Leitartikel zum Web 2.0 - 0 views
Soziale Netzwerke und ihre Nutzer - 0 views
-
Das rasanteste Wachstum legt derzeit die RTL-Beteiligung wer-kennt-wen.de (www.wer-kennt-wen.de) hin. Nach eigenen Angaben sind inzwischen über 3 Millionen Mitglieder beim 2006 entstanden Dienst registriert. Die ProSiebenSat1-Beteiligung Lokalisten (www.lokalisten.de) kommt auf über 2 Millionen registrierte Nutzer. Beim Schüler-Netzwerk schülervz (www.schuelervz.net) sind über 2,5 Millionen Mitglieder unterwegs, beim Studenten-Netzwerk studiVZ (www.studivz.net) mehr als 5,6 Millionen. Beim amerikanischen Dienst MySpace (www.myspace.de) tummeln sich ebenfalls mehrere Millionen deutsche Nutzer.
-
Strukturdaten ausgesuchter Social Networks (Bildung) *
FriendFeed: One Feature to The Tipping Point - 0 views
-
FriendFeed is not a lifestream aggregator anymore (at least to me and hundreds of others), it is the perfect platform for sharing and discussing content with groups focused on a specific topic. It is Forums 2.0, if you will and it is precisely what the social web, even with gods like Facebook, Digg, YouTube, and Flickr, are severely lacking
Facebook Photos Pulls Away From The Pack - 0 views
-
If Facebook has one standout application it has to be Photos. Measured on its own, it is the largest photo site on the Web. A full 69 percent of Facebook’s monthly visitors worldwide either look at or upload photos, based on comScore data. And more than 10 billion photos have been uploaded to the site.
Empirical Study: Twitter is not a Social Network « iRevolution - 0 views
Repräsentativumfrage „Kommunikationsverhalten deutscher Internet-Nutzer": 58%... - 0 views
-
Repräsentativumfrage „Kommunikationsverhalten deutscher Internet-Nutzer", die die Universität Augsburg und die Convios Consulting GmbH im Auftrag von Web.de erstellt haben
-
Studi VZ, Schüler VZ und MySpace vor allem bei jungen Menschen sehr bekannt, während Wer-kennt-wen, Xing und Stayfriends eher bei älteren Menschen (über 24 Jahre)
-
Den höchsten Bekanntheitsgrad weist jedoch Stayfriends mit 48 Prozent auf.
- ...1 more annotation...
Berkman Center-Studie "Enhancing Child Safety and Online Technologies": Fachl... - 0 views
-
Veröffentlichung einer aktuellen, von hochkarätigen Experten unter Führung des Berkman Centers der Harvard Universität verfassten Studie
-
Die Antworten der Studie schmecken weder manchen der Auftraggeber, noch dem nach Sensationen lüsternden Teil der Presse: In Wahrheit, konstatiert das 278-Seiten-Papier, sei das Problem gar nicht so groß wie immer wieder behauptet wird. Es werde auch in den Medien aufgeblasen.
-
Beteiligt an der Erarbeitung durch die nur zu diesem Zweck gegründete "Internet Safety Technical Task Force" waren neben Thinktanks, Akademischen Instituten und Industrievertretern auch Jugendschutzorganisationen wie das National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.
- ...3 more annotations...
SOCIAL NETWORKS ARE LIKE THE EYE: A Talk with Nicholas A. Christakis (Edge 238) - 0 views
-
Christakis notes that he is "interested not in biological contagion, but in social contagion. One possible mechanism is that I observe you and you begin to display certain behaviors that I then copy. For example, you might start running and then I might start running. Or you might invite me to go running with you. Or you might start eating certain fatty foods and I might start copying that behavior and eat fatty foods. Or you might take me with you to restaurants where I might eat fatty foods. What spreads from person to person is a behavior, and it is the behavior that we both might exhibit that then contributes to our changes in body size. So, the spread of behaviors from person to person might cause or underlie the spread of obesity.
-
with respect to how networks arise, we imagine that the formation of networks obeys certain fundamental biological, genetic, physiological, sociological, and technological rules
-
The amazing thing about social networks, unlike other networks that are almost as interesting — networks of neurons or genes or stars or computers or all kinds of other things one can imagine — is that the nodes of a social network — the entities, the components — are themselves sentient, acting individuals who can respond to the network and actually form it themselves.
- ...44 more annotations...
Are Games the Future of Facebook? - 0 views
Teenager-Communitys: Heute schon zärtlich Heagggdl gesagt? - 0 views
-
Die größte Online-Community für Jugendliche heißt Piczo. Weltweit tummeln sich dort 28 Millionen Mitglieder.
Putting people into the protocol | FactoryCity - 0 views
-
Here’s what I’ve come up with so far: I am me, wherever I go. I may have multiple personas, facets or identities that I use online, but fundamentally, I can manage them more effectively because services are oriented around me and not around the services that I use (it would be like logging into a new user account every time you want to switch applications!). I have access to my stuff, wherever I am. Even though I use lots of different web services, just like I use lots of desktop applications, I can always access my data, no matter where I created it or where it’s stored. And if I want to get all of my data out of a service into another one, I should be able to do so. My friends come with me, but continue to use only the services that they chose to. If I can send email from any domain to any domain, why can’t I join one network and then add friends from any other network? I am the master of my domain. Both literally and figuratively, I should be able to choose any identity provider to manage all my external connections to the world, including running my own, from my own domain. While remote service providers can certainly set the standards for who they allow access to their APIs, this should be done in a clear and transparent way, so that even people who host their own identity can have fair access.