Showing posts with label whatsapp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label whatsapp. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Social Media news and updates

 Updated August 18. 2022

Social media is polluting society. Moderation alone won’t fix the problem

Companies already have the systems in place that are needed to evaluate their deeper impacts on the social fabric.

 

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Updated information Aug 1, 2022

Jul 25, 2022 - Technology

Sunset of the social network

Scott Rosenberg
  • That's how TikTok sorts the videos it shows users, and that's largely how Facebook will now organize its home screen.
  • The dominant player in social media is transforming itself into a kind of digital mass media, in which the reactions of hordes of anonymous users, processed by machine learning, drive the selection of your content.
  • .........
  • Meta owns a big chunk of that market, too, thanks to Facebook Messenger and its ownership of WhatsApp.
  • At the other end of the media spectrum, the "discovery engines" run by TikTok and Meta will duke it out with streaming services to capture billions of eyeballs around the globe and sell that attention to advertisers.

All this leaves a vacuum in the middle — the space of forums, ad-hoc group formation and small communities that first drove excitement around internet adoption in the pre-Facebook era.

  • Facebook's sunseting of its own social network could open a new space for innovation on this turf, where relative newcomers like Discord are already beginning to thrive.

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Twitter now lets you soft-block followers

Now you can remove someone from your followers list without blocking them entirely.

Monday, June 7, 2021

Social Media Platforms - June 2021

  Instagram revealed how it decides what content, like posts and stories, to show you. One of the deciding factors is how often you interact with the person who posted. Here are the other three things Instagram uses to feed you content.

Platforms to keep an eye on 👀
The challengers: These young multi-billion dollar platforms are nipping at the heels of social giants that grew up in the late 2000s and early 2010s.
  • Tiktok: China’s first globe-spanning social app has cemented its place alongside US-based competitors like Facebook and Twitter. 
  • note: I personally haven't used it and I don't intend to use it. 
  • Clubhouse: With just 10 million users, the year-old audio-only platform generated major buzz during the pandemic and has spawned copycats from almost every major social media player. (More on that below.)
  • Discord: After turning down an acquisition offer from Microsoft, the audio- and text-based chat platform is eyeing an IPO.
Experiments to watch: These nascent platforms are testing users’ appetite for new content formats that haven’t been packaged together in exactly the same way by the reigning social networks.
  • Houseparty: The video chat app allows users to spontaneously hop into calls with any of their friends who are online, or join any open group conversation in which they know at least one person.
  • Yubo: This French social network aimed at teens combines elements of dating apps like Tinder with live streams of everyday life you might find on Twitch.
  • Poparazzi: The photo sharing app doesn’t allow users to add pictures to their own profiles. Instead, users add to their friends’ profiles by uploading photos of them (acting as their paparazzi—get it?).
  • Honk: In this live texting app, messages aren’t saved and friends see your messages in real time as you type them.


Brief history
2004: Mark Zuckerberg drops out of Harvard and launches Facebook.
2005: Two University of Virginia students launch Reddit with $100,000 from Y Combinator.
2006: Two ex-Google employees launch Twitter as a side project while building a podcasting tool.
2009: WhatsApp is founded. Facebook would later buy it and guide its growth to 2 billion users.
March 2010: Pinterest launches in an early beta mode.
Oct. 2010: Instagram is founded. Facebook would later buy it and guide its growth to 1 billion users.
2011: Snapchat is founded. Facebook would later make an unsuccessful attempt to buy it, followed by a more successful attempt to hamstring its growth by copying its “story” feature.
2012: Vine, the last major platform of the early social media era, is founded. Twitter would soon buy it and kill it.
Of the newer challengers mentioned above, Discord was founded first, in 2015. It wasn’t until 2018 that the app began seeing explosive growth—and, as with TikTok and Clubhouse, Discord was catapulted into further popularity during the pandemic in 2020.

Charting Facebook’s dominance
Facebook owns four of the world’s most popular social platforms, illustrating the extent to which the company was able to consolidate its power over social media over the past decade.
Facebook owns four of the top social apps.
Quartz
 
There are a few possible factors that help explain the new faces in the field:
  1. Regulators spooked Facebook by stepping up antitrust enforcement. Wary of attracting negative attention, the social media giant has eased up on its usual practice of buying up potential competitors, giving them time to develop on their own.
  2. Users have embraced new content formats and no one platform can do everything well. Apps like TikTok and Clubhouse filled unserved niches (short video and live audio, respectively) that the major platforms left vacant.
  3. Incumbents lost users’ trust. Facebook and Twitter have borne the brunt of the blame since 2016 for amplifying misinformation, snooping on user data, and applying inconsistent moderation standards, leaving people more willing to try out a new option.
  4. The pandemic left people feeling bored, lonely, and eager to find new ways to connect via social media.
Whatever the reason, we’re about to find out which theory is right. The challengers could continue to grow, carving out their own niches or even stealing market share for Facebook. Or the giants could win again.

23 June 2021: Google is facing another antitrust investigation by the EU. Officials are scrutinizing whether Google prioritized its own online ad business over competitors. More on the probe here.
 

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

Social Media latest news: WhatsApp

 WhatsApp is suing the Indian government. The Facebook-owned platform took legal action over new social media rules that would remove encryption of messages and enable “mass surveillance.” Today is the deadline for the major tech companies to comply with the drastic changes.

Sunday, January 10, 2021

Social Media and Apps

 

Here’s What You Need To Know To Get Your YouTube Channel Up And Running
by  | April 8, 2019
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5 Questions to Ask Before Hiring an Online PR Agency

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By Sue Pinky Benson, RE/MAX Realty Team Agent and Social Media National Speaker

 to look into this if it's still relevant

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February 2021 update:

 

Why WhatsApp users are pushing

family members to Signal

A backlash movement against the messaging app is partly rooted in a distrust of its parent company, Facebook.

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Today got this info from someone regarding facebook and fact check:

GO TO YOUR FB SETTINGS,
GO TO SETTINGS,
GO TO BLOCKING,
TYPE IN FACT CHECK,
THEN BLOCK ALL OF THEM.
THESE ARE THE FB "BOTS" THAT KEEP REPORTING YOUR POSTS.
 
Jan 25, 2021
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WhatsApp Has Shared Your Data With Facebook for Years, Actually

A pop-up notification has alerted the messaging app's users to a practice that's been in place since 2016.

Why it's best to use CASH - cash is king

 Via social media post, here is a very interesting explanation as to why pay with cash whenever possible, when you are shopping. I copied th...