Researchers use Twitter tweets to measure moods

(Reuters Life!) – Twitter is for more than just tweeting.

Using millions of Twitter messages, or tweets, from the popular social networking site, researchers at Northeastern University in Boston have created a Twitter Mood Map to measure the moods of the nation.

People are happiest in the morning and in the evening, with happiness peaking on Sunday morning and dipping Thursday night, they found. Twitter users appeared most gloomy at mid-afternoon, shifting to better moods in the evening.

Not surprisingly, people appeared happier on the weekends, with residents of California, Miami and southern states among the most content, they learned.

A colorful time-lapse video on the website here shows the happy moods pulsating from the U.S. east coast to the west coast and back again.

The researchers are the first to admit the findings are not terribly scientific — Twitter users tend to be tech-savvy, live in large cities and are a fraction of the total population — but according to the results they have potential as a tool for providing real-time analysis of critical issues.

“Even though individual tweets are pointless to anyone besides your followers, in aggregate there is a lot of meaningful information that can be an instrument to see how people feel about things, whether it’s public reaction to a politician’s speech or a consumer attitudes about a brand,” said Sune Lehmann, one of the researchers.

Lehmann and others used a psychological word-rating system to analyze key words in some 300 million Twitter messages as happy or sad. They then created maps based on the location of the messages and the general moods they evoke.

The map could be useful not only to collect public opinion but to mobilize users quickly, such as in a drive for emergency relief donations.

“The potential there is tremendous, on both an individual and societal level,” said Johan Bollen, a computer scientist at Indiana University not involved in the project. “It’s absolutely crucial to have real-time indicators about how the public feels, not in months, but in a matter of hours and days.”

LinkedIn communications at center of unprecedented lawsuit

In a first-of-its kind lawsuit, an IT staffing firm has accused one of its former employees of violating the terms of her non-compete agreements through her conduct on LinkedIn.

The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Minnesota by TEKsystems Inc., charges former employee Brelyn Hammernik of soliciting TEKSystems’ employees and clients using LinkedIn.

The lawsuit alleges that after Hammernik left TEKsystems in Nov. 2009, she “communicated” with at least 20 TEKSystems contract employees and “connected” with about 16 of them using the LinkedIn professional network.

TEKsystems contends that Hammernik’s actions were on behalf of her new employer and constituted a violation of the non-compete and non-solicitation contracts that she signed when joining TEKsystems as a recruiter in Jan. 2007.

The case could “have far-reaching implications for the law governing restrictive covenants in employment,” Renee Jackson, a Boston-based labor and employment attorney with Nixon Peabody LLP, wrote in a blog post.

The lawsuit raises the interesting legal question of whether the mere act of connecting with other professionals on a social networking site constitute a violation of non-compete and non-solicitation contracts, Jackson wrote. “Does the mere existence of a network of professional contacts equal solicitation?” wrote Jackson, who declined to be interviewed for this story citing conflict issues.

It also raises the question of whether complying with a non-solicitation restriction would require individuals to disconnect and de-friend colleagues and customers of former employees until the restriction period expires, Jackson noted.

According to TEKsystems, its restrictive covenants specifically forbade Hammernik from contacting its employees for the purposes of recruiting them, for a period of 18 months after leaving the company.

TEKsystems names two other former employees, and Horizontal Integration, Inc. Hammernik’s current employer in its lawsuit. The suit against Hammernik was filed in March, but the case has flown largely under the media radar so far.

The TEKsystems complaint lists a specific example of a LinkedIn communication where Hammernik appears to be inviting a employee of the firm to join her new company.

That one exchange could be seen as a clear violation of Hammernik’s non-compete agreement, Jackson said. But even here it’s unclear if she would have some wiggle room if Hammernik’s contract did not specifically mention social media communications, she wrote.

“Does the medium matter, or just the message? Would such communication be treated the same as e-mail, or does ‘social media’ require its own standard?” Jackson wrote.

Rob Radcliff, an attorney with Gruber, Hurst, Johansen & Hail LLP, who has represented IT recruiting firms in non-compete cases, said it’s the first time where social media communications is being used as direct evidence of a non-compete violation.

Radcliff said Hammernik could have a hard time defending herself based on the LinkedIn communications that TEKsystems has highlighted in its complaint.

But what is unclear is how the company might have gotten its hands on the communications, and how many other examples the company might have of similar exchanges, Radcliff said. “In terms of the violation, the only evidence appears to be the LinkedIn communication,” he said. “You got to wonder if the other communications were similar.”

Typically, unless there is some “draconian provision”, non-compete agreements should not prevent employees from using sites such as LinkedIn to remain in touch with other professionals and update contacts on their whereabouts, he said.

It’s only when they use such sites to openly solicit that the could run into trouble, as happened in this case, he said.

Jaikumar Vijayan covers data security and privacy issues, financial services security and e-voting for Computerworld. Follow Jaikumar on Twitter at @jaivijayan or subscribe to Jaikumar’s RSS feed. His e-mail address is jvijayan@computerworld.com.

Read more about management and careers in Computerworld’s Management and Careers Topic Center.

Original story – here

myYearbook Debuts Celebrity Chatter

MTV and VH1 Become Exclusive Entertainment News Providers for myYearbook`s
Real-Time Stream
NEW YORK–(Business Wire)–
myYearbook, the best place to meet new people and one of the 25 most-trafficked
sites in the United States, announced today it launched Celebrity Chatter, a
real-time stream featuring the latest entertainment newsfeeds exclusively from
MTV and VH1 as well as content from over 50 A-list celebrities including Jason
Derulo and Anberlin.

Launched in 2009, Chatter is a discovery engine for meeting new people and
playing fun games. Today Celebrity Chatter further expands the stream experience
by bringing entertainment news from MTV, VH1 and celebrities directly to
myYearbook members.

“myYearbook`s members can now access our exclusive music video premieres, get
the latest buzz on their favorite MTV and VH1 shows including MTV`s ‘Jersey
Shore’ and VH1`s upcoming ‘The Ultimate Catch’ with Chad OchoCinco, and receive
real time pop-culture, celebrity and entertainment news from thefablife.com and
mtvnews.com -all without ever having to leave the stream,” said Kristin Frank,
Senior Vice President and General Manager of MTV.com and VH1.com

“myYearbook is the fastest growing social networking site in the U.S., receiving
as many page views and total minutes as Twitter.com in the U.S.,” said Geoff
Cook, CEO of myYearbook. “Celebrities have begun to realize that our growing
platform and membership demographics make myYearbook a fantastic destination for
reaching their fans through social media. It won`t be long before multiple
celebrities on myYearbook have one million or more fans.”

Celebrity Chatter creates a `Celebs` tab in its popular Chatter service that
enables the myYearbook audience to keep up with celebrities and ask them
questions right in the stream. “Our goal in creating Celebrity Chatter was to
personalize celebrities and create an environment where they could engage
authentically with our users,” said myYearbook`s Editor-in-Chief, Kate Heath.
“We wanted to turn the traditional celebrity interview around and put the users
in control of the questions.”

Once celebrities create verified fan pages on myYearbook, their status updates
are fed directly into myYearbook`s Celebrity Chatter stream, which are viewable
on the site`s highly trafficked homepage.

“It`s great to be a part of myYearbook`s Celebrity Chatter – it`s so important
to be connected to my fans who have supported me from the beginning,” said R&B
pop sensation Jason Derulo, just one of over 50 celebrities whose fan page
launched with the site`s newest feature.

Celebrities who joined Celebrity Chatter for its launch receive a $2,500
donation towards the charity of their choice from myYearbook, which has given
hundreds of thousands of dollars to an array of organizations through its
charitable giving Causes application. “It`s important for me to share causes
that are close to my heart with my fans,” said Stephen Christian, frontman of
alt-rock band Anberlin and co-founder of non-profit Faceless International, “and
myYearbook`s Celebrity Chatter allowed me to do that.”

About myYearbook

myYearbook makes meeting new people fun and easy. myYearbook combines innovative
social games, virtual goods, social applications, and a robust virtual currency
called “Lunch Money” to facilitate introductions and break the ice. The average
myYearbook member visits the site 13 times per month and spends 14 minutes per
visit, making myYearbook one of the most engaging social media destinations on
the Internet. According to comScore, myYearbook is one of the 25 most-trafficked
sites in the United States as measured by page views, by minutes, and by minutes
per visitor per month. myYearbook started in a single high school in 2005 and
has grown to over 20 million members worldwide. For more information please
visit: www.myYearbook.com

About MTV Networks

MTV Networks, a division of Viacom (NYSE: VIA, VIA.B), is one of the world`s
leading creators of entertainment content, with brands that engage and connect
diverse audiences across television, online, mobile, games, virtual worlds and
consumer products. The company`s portfolio spans more than 150 television
channels and 350 digital media properties worldwide, and includes MTV, VH1, CMT,
Logo, Harmonix, Nickelodeon, Nick at Nite, Noggin, The N, AddictingGames,
Neopets, COMEDY CENTRAL, Spike TV, TV Land, Atom, GameTrailers and Xfire.

Dig Communications
Stephna May, 415-367-4102
smay [at] digcommunications [dot] com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Bangladesh lifts ban on Facebook

Dhaka, June 6 — Authorities in Bangladesh have lifted a ban on popular social networking website Facebook, more than a week after the government temporarily restricted access to the site, officials said. Mango Telecom Services, a private internet service provider, on Saturday reopened the site for Bangladeshi users as directed by telecom regulators, Mir Masud Kabir, the managing director of the company, told local media.

The restriction was imposed May 29 after what officials said was a section of the site out to hurt religious sentiments in the Muslim-majority country by uploading a number of controversial images on the site that go against the Muslim belief. Some members of the social networking site had organized an “Everyone Draw Mohammed Day” competition, prompting protests among Muslims who believe images of the prophet are blasphemous.

The organisers said the event was meant to promote freedom of expression, but Muslims across the world expressed anger over it.

Court serves paternity test order to Oz man through Facebook!

Sydney, June 4 (ANI): An Australian man, who eluded requests to a paternity test, has finally been served after a court ordered the legal documents be sent through social networking site Facebook.

Federal magistrate, Stewart Brown, who made the order, said the Adelaide case was unusual but “demonstrative of social movements and the currency of the times”.

The man, known only as Howard, had a brief relationship with a woman who later gave birth, and when the mother sought an assessment of child support her application was rejected for lack of legal proof of paternity.

The mother’s solicitor repeatedly wrote to Howard asking him to undergo a paternity test, but he moved regularly and there was no reply.

Letters sent care of his parents and current girlfriend elicited no reply, and a process server had no success delivering the documents.

When Brown was told a private message could be left for Howard on Facebook, as he was a regular user, he ordered that the documents be served electronically.

In a recently published judgment, delivered in Adelaide, Brown said he was satisfied Howard had been properly served with the documents and inferred Howard wanted no involvement as “the parentage test can have only one outcome because he is the child’s father”.

After the documents were served Howard closed his Facebook profile and MySpace website.

But Brown found the mother was entitled to an assessment of child support, payable by Howard.

Tim Butcher, a senior lecturer at RMIT, said it was an example of creativity in the legal system.

“People are finding new ways to use social media every day,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted him as saying.

“It’s only natural that courts, businesses, government agencies will use these tools to track us down. You have the world at your fingertips – but the flip side is that people can find us as well,” he added. (ANI)

Jaeger sales holding firm, online booming

(Reuters) – Sales at British luxury fashion brand Jaeger have grown strongly, shrugging off recent turmoil in financial markets, helped by a booming online business which is set to double in size over three years.

Chief Executive Belinda Earl told the Reuters Global Luxury Summit that Internet sales were set to grew to 10 percent of total revenues by 2013, fueled by a revamped website linked to social networking portals, and surging demand from overseas.

She also saw opportunities to expand the 126-year-old Jaeger brand into more accessories and areas, such as childrenswear, as well as new markets, such as Russia.

Demand for luxury goods has bounced back from a deep recession. But analysts fear the debt crisis in Greece, and ensuing plunge in equity markets, could hit consumers spending again.

Last month Jaeger reported a 12 percent rise in sales for the first few weeks of its financial year, starting March 1, and Earl said that trend had continued despite economic uncertainty.

“We’ve not read anything into the last two or three weeks. In fact our trading has maintained,” she said, noting particularly strong demand in Hong Kong and online.

Jaeger recently started delivering to 29 countries from its website, and Earl said that had had a dramatic effect.

“We’ve seen a quantum increase in international sales in the last month … and I think that will only grow,” she said, adding the online business was likely to overtake Jaeger’s biggest store in terms of annual sales in about two years.

Luxury goods firms have been slower to embrace the Internet than other retailers, concerned it would not be able to offer the high-end service their customers expect.

However, Earl said the technology had now moved far beyond simply pasting pictures onto a screen and brands could harness the Internet to strengthen their credentials with consumers.

Bigger rival Burberry (BRBY.L) said last week it had over one million followers on social networking site Facebook, and that its own social media site artofthetrench.com had received over seven million page views since its launch in November.

Earl said Jaeger’s new website this autumn would offer similar social networking capabilities, as well as a separate section for its new Boutique range.

EXPANSION

A former head of department stores group Debenhams (DEB.L), Earl is credited with taking Jaeger from English county shows to international catwalks, as well as broadening the brand into new product areas, such as homewares, sunglasses and fragrance.

Earl said the brand, which is majority-owned by Chairman Harold Tillman, would not be immune to any fresh downturn, but that its improvements in design and diversification meant it was well placed to cope.

The immediate focus was on this autumn’s launch of Boutique, a new, slightly cheaper range aimed at younger women.

However, the firm would continue to look at new product areas, Earl said, and in particular believes it can build sales of accessories to around 20 percent of the group total over the next two years, up from about 12 percent currently.

It would also look at launching a childrenswear range in the coming years, she added.

International expansion will continue too.

Jaeger announced a deal last month to enter the United States in Nordstrom department stores, as well as plans to expand further in Britain and the Middle East.

Earl said the group had longer-term ambitions to grow in Russia, and had struck a partnership deal with local luxury goods retailer Jamilco which would aim to open a store in around two years time and up to ten over the next 5-10 years.

Jaeger was also looking for a new partner in Japan, after a licensing deal there expired last year, and for possible partners in mainland China, but had no plans to enter the Indian market for the time being, she said.

(Editing by Louise Heavens)

Now, Pak bans Twitter for carrying blasphemous contents

Islamabad, May 21 (ANI): Following a ban on famous networking website Facebook, and popular video sharing portal YouTube, another immensely admired social networking site-Twitter has been banned in Pakistan for carrying blasphemous contents.

Hundreds of Twitter users tried in vain to log in to their accounts as a message- “This site has been restricted,” was displayed on their computer screens.

Acting on the Lahore High Court’s decision the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) had earlier directed all internet service providers in the country to shut down both Facebook and YouTube, as protests against the sacrilegious depiction of Prophet Muhammad on these two sites intensified across the country.

A statement issued by the PTA said that it has blocked over 450 links containing offensive content.

In Peshawar, more than 500 people participated in a protest against Facebook for holding competitions of drawing caricatures of Prophet Muhammad. They chanted slogans against the government and demanded it to end all ties with countries where these ‘blasphemous’ caricatures are being published. (ANI)

EU Parliament slams Pak blasphemy laws that condone ‘murder’ of minorities

Strasbourg, France, May 21 (ANI): The EU Parliament has slammed Pakistan for its totalitarian ‘blasphemy’ laws, which the Parliament feels, can be easily abused, and have “led to an increase of violence against members of religious minorities”.

Certain laws even carry the death-penalty and there is ample scope for misinterpretation. The EU Parliament has called for a “thoroughgoing review” of the laws in the light of their oppressive nature.

According to The Dawn, the Parliament said the laws “often used to justify censorship, criminalisation, persecution and, in certain cases, the murder of members of political, racial and religious minorities.”

The Parliament mentioned Ahmadis, Christians, Hindus, Sikhs, Shiites, Buddhists, Parsis, Bahais and critical citizens who dare to raise their voice against injustice as susceptible.

The texts in question “are misused by extremist groups and those wishing to settle personal scores,” the EU deputies said.

The Parliament did not take into account recent face-saving measures by Pakistan to appease minorities, such as adoption of a “National Minorities Day”, establishing a quota of five per cent for minorities in the federal jobs sector and recognising non-Muslim public holidays.

Other invidious practices include the practice of including religious details on citizens” passports, which the Memebrs of European Parliament (MEPs) feel could lead to “discriminatory practices”.

Pakistan seems to be continuing in its drive to root out “sacrilegious” content as it recently mooted a proposal for imposing a permanent ban on social-networking site, Facebook, for “hurting” Muslim sentiments by holing competitions on Prophet Mohammed caricatures. (ANI)

Pak students against ban on Facebook, YouTube in country

Islamabad, May 21 (ANI): Pakistani students are opposing the government’s decision to ban the hugely popular social networking site-Facebook and video portal YouTube, saying the move would only encourage extremism in the country.

“Pakistani people have the right to know about the world. The extremists want to snatch this right from the people which will certainly help extremism,” The Daily Times quoted student from Karachi, as saying.

“The competition hurt Muslims. But only that link should have been blocked. Facebook has nothing to do with it. It’s just that one page,” a Lahore based student said, while refusing to be named.

It may be noted that the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has directed all internet service providers in the country to shut down YouTube, as protests against the sacrilegious depiction of Prophet Muhammad on both YouTube and Facebook intensified across the country.

A statement issued by the PTA said that it has blocked over 450 links containing offensive content.

In Peshawar, more than 500 people participated in a protest against Facebook for holding competitions of drawing caricatures of Prophet Muhammad. They chanted slogans against the government and demanded it to end all ties with countries where these ‘blasphemous’ caricatures are being published.

Over 50 pct Facebook users could delete accounts over privacy worries

London, May 20 (ANI): A security firm has suggested that more than half of Facebook users are considering deleting their profile from the site because of privacy concerns.

According to Sophos, a computer security organisation, concerns about privacy are running so high that 60 percent of the 1,588 Facebook users questioned said they were considering deleting their accounts.

A further 16 percent said they had already stopped using Facebook because they felt they had inadequate control over their data, while a quarter said that they would not be quitting the social networking site, which has almost 500 million users worldwide.

Facebook has attracted criticism in recent weeks for the perceived complexity of its privacy settings, and the fact that users have to opt-out of sharing some of their information with third parties, rather than give explicit consent by opting in.

Although Facebook is expected to look again at its privacy policy in the coming days, it may not be enough to halt an online campaign for a mass Facebook “suicide” on May 31, with thousands of users encouraged to delete their accounts.

“This poll shows that the majority of users are fed up with the lack of control that Facebook gives users over their data,” the Telegraph quoted Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, as saying.

“Most still don”t know how to set their Facebook privacy options safely, finding the whole system confusing.

“What”s needed is a fundamental shift towards asking users to ”opt-in” to sharing information, rather than to ”opt-out”.

“A mass exodus from Facebook seems unlikely, but users are clearly getting more interested in knowing precisely who can view their data.

“People use Facebook to share private information and are unlikely to want their holiday snaps or new mobile number accidentally popping up all over the Internet,” he added. (ANI)

Ex porn star Tia Brodie bombarded with sex proposals after BGT stint

London, May 20 (ANI): Former porn star Tia Brodie has been receiving messages from men begging her for sex ever since she appeared in Britain’s Got Talent.

Brodie, 33, who received the messages through her profile page on social networking site Facebook, had to tell her fans on May 15 to stop sending requests for sex.

“Not sure how to put this… PLEASE stop sending me emails asking me for sex! I guess I should be flattered but it’s getting so tedious,” the Sun quoted her as writing on her Facebook page.

Several of them even asked for nude photos of her.

“Erm…no I do NOT have any naked photos I can send you!” she wrote on May 17. (ANI)

”Everybody Draw Mohammed Day” triggers Facebook row

Washington, May 20 (ANI): The ”Everybody Draw Mohammed Day” on Facebook, which was a cartoonist”s call to action against censorship, has snowballed into a controversy leading to death threats, a court order and a call for a boycott of the social networking site.

Seattle-based cartoonist named Molly Norris started the campaign in a bid to protest against Comedy Central”s decision to censor an episode of ‘South Park’ that depicted Muhammad in a bear costume.

The network took the decision after an Islamic extremist website warned of retaliation against the show”s creators, Matt Stone and Trey Parker

And to protest against the decision, Norris created a poster with likenesses of Muhammad as a domino, a teacup and a box of pasta.

Thus, she declared May 20 as ‘Everybody Draw Mohammed Day!’— and her efforts quickly went viral, spawning several Facebook pages with thousands of followers dedicated to the event.

They also prompted a “protest” movement by thousands of other Facebook users opposed to it.

While Norris herself has withdrawn from the cause, but she is glad her efforts encouraged others to speak out.

“I just thought that Viacom or Comedy Central had overreacted to a veiled threat from a tiny blog or website that not many people even belong to, and I think it just set a precedent for a slippery slope in censorship,” Fox News quoted Norris as saying.

“If artists have to be afraid of what they draw, then what’s the point of even living here? That”s what really bothered me,” she added.

As of May 19, more than 41,000 Facebook users associated themselves to one page dedicated to the event, and a similar page was “liked” by at least 4,400 users.

Meanwhile, over 56,000 users joined a Facebook page opposing it.

And in Pakistan, a court on Wednesday ordered the government to block Facebook pages associated with the campaign until May 31.

Muslims consider any depiction of the Prophet Muhammad to be blasphemous, and it is a crime punishable by death.

“The court also has ordered the foreign ministry to investigate why such a competition is being held,” said Azhar Siddique, a representative of the Islamic Lawyers Forum who filed a petition in the Lahore High Court.

Organizers of the Facebook page protesting the drawing campaign are calling for users to boycott the social networking site for the company”s inaction against the ‘Everybody Draw Mohammad’ pages.

Some say the campaign is nothing more than a way to incite Muslims.

A Facebook spokesman told FoxNews.com it has no plans to censor any of the pages associated with the campaign or the counter-campaign, though threats will be removed. (ANI)

Facebook considers simplifying complicated privacy settings

London, May 20 (ANI): Social networking site Facebook has been noting the complaints about its privacy settings being too complex and is considering simplifying them.

It has decided to take up the matter after criticism of its privacy policy came from US senators, the European Union and civil liberty groups.

The site also stated that it was listening to the message from users that it has “made things too complex”.

“We’re working on responding to these concerns,” the BBC quoted a spokeswoman as saying.

“Watch this space,” she added.

At the end of last year Facebook changed its default privacy settings, allowing profile information to be shared with the wider web, unless users specifically opted out.

Last month it moved a step further, opening up Facebook data to third-party websites, described by founder Mark Zuckerberg as a move towards “a web where the default is social”.

While Facebook sold the idea as a way to offer a more personalised surfing experience, critics were concerned that users were losing control over their information.

It prompted a letter from the European Commission saying changes to its privacy settings were “unacceptable”.

The move caused outrage among some users, who have organised a “Quit Facebook” day, scheduled for May 31. (ANI)

Now, Twitter inspired TV drama!

Melbourne, May 19 (ANI): American television network CBS is set to make a new show based on social networking site Twitter.

The drama will narrate Justin Halpern’s experiences shared on the popular Twitter account @shitmydadsays.

Halpern had started Tweeting after moving in with his outspoken elderly father, reports the Age.

Some Tweets read: “I didn”t say you were ugly. I said your girlfriend is better looking than you, and standing next to her, you look ugly.”

“A parent”s only as good as their dumbest kid. If one wins a Nobel Prize but the other gets robbed by a hooker, you failed.”

Justin Halpern, has only tweeted just over 100 times but has already turned his popular feed (more than one million followers) into a novel that has made the New York Times bestseller list for non-fiction.

Boston Legal star William Shatner is set to play the father in the new TV series .

“I”m on CBS this fall. I just heard so I”m passing it on to you! My best, Bill,” the Age quoted him as writing on Twitter.

The comedy is tentatively titled ‘Bleep My Dad Says’. (ANI)

Radio rules the roost as most trusted source of news in UK

London, May 19 (ANI): Video has not, after all, killed the radio star if a UK Office of Communications survey is to be gone by, as according to it, radio has emerged as the most trusted source of news in the UK ahead of TV and the Internet.

Ofcom, the independent telecom regulator for the UK, found that 66% of people considered radio to be reliable and accurate, compared with 58% for online, 54% for TV and just 34% for newspapers.

This year has been a lean one for the once infallible Television, with the Internet pipping it to bag the position of the second most trusted source for the first time.

However there was significant difference of opinion between adults and youngsters regarding the subject of reliability of news websites, with just 3 out of 10 adults rating them as “reliable and accurate”

According to the BBC, the survey, of 1,824 people over the age of 16, was conducted in 2009.

The survey also found the use of digital TV, Internet and mobile phones had increased since 2007.

About three quarters (73%) of adults used the Internet in 2009, up from two thirds (63%) in 2007, while 91% of the population used a mobile phone.

Half of all Internet users said that using the Internet had increased their contact with friends or family who lived further away, and about a quarter said it had increased their contact with friends who live nearby.

Social networking sites such as Facebook were among the most popular sites, with 35% of respondents regularly using the Internet to keep in touch with family and friends.

Reiterating the soaring popularity of online social networking, the survey found that twice as many Internet users had a social networking site profile (44%) compared with 2007, the BBC reports. (ANI)

Social network history can reveal your identity

London, May 19 (ANI): When you enrol yourself as a member on a social networking site, may be revealing more than you bargained for, an experimental website has proved.

The website has managed to identify the names of people who visit it, by harvesting information about the groups they belong to.

And the trick could act as the biggest tool for marketing teams and scammers.

The snooping site exploits the fact that your web browser keeps track of which web addresses you have visited.

Website owners can collect this information by hiding a list of web addresses in the code for their web page, reports New Scientist.

When someone accesses this page, their browser will tell the website owner which of the hidden addresses they have already visited.

Membership groups within social networks have distinct web addresses and the names of group members are publicly available.

Gilbert Wondracek at the Vienna University of Technology in Austria and his colleagues collected data on 6500 groups, containing 1.8 million users, on Xing, a business-oriented social network based in Hamburg, Germany.

On analysing the overlap between membership lists they estimated that 42 per cent of users could be uniquely identified by the groups they visit.

The researchers then built a website that read visitors” history of browsing Xing addresses.

When they asked 26 friends and colleagues who use Xing to try it, they were able to identify 15 of them.

Since Wondracek”s experiment, Xing has started adding random numbers to the addresses used to access its membership groups.

The Xing server ignores the extra numbers, but they confuse attacks by a site like Wondracek”s.

More complete protection may come in the next round of browser updates. The developers of Firefox, Chrome and Safari are working on fixes that will prevent browsing history being relayed back to website owners.

The study was presented at the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy in Oakland, California. (ANI)

Justin Bieber no longer a trending topic on Twitter

New York, May 16 (ANI): Teen idol Justin Bieber is no longer the hottest thing on Twitter.

The social networking site has confirmed that the algorithm used for their Trending Topics feature has been changed to reflect what is ‘immediately popular’.

The 16-year-old singing sensation was a remarkably constant presence on the list of most-mentioned words, phrases and tags due to his fans” frequent posts about him.

But due to recent tweaks to the site”s algorithm, ‘Bieber Fever’ is over, reports the New York Daily News.

“The new algorithm identifies topics that are immediately popular, rather than topics that have been popular for a while or on a daily basis, to help people discover the ”most breaking” breaking news from across the world. We think that trending topics which capture the hottest emerging trends and topics of discussion on Twitter are the most interesting,” Twitter explains in a May 14 post in its Help section.

Twitter said that the algorithm is ‘very much a work in progress,’ adding that the site does not ‘block’ any topics from trending. (ANI)

Facebook friend murders Australian woman

Sydney, May 15 (IANS) An Australian woman who had gone to meet a man she befriended on social networking site Facebook has been murdered, a media report Saturday said.

Acting on a tip-off, police arrested a 20-year-old man from Leumeah, a suburb of Sydney, and based on information given by him, found a woman’s body Friday near Warminda Oval at Campbelltown, Australian news agency AAP reported.

Though police have not yet formally identified the body, it is believed to be of a missing woman – Nona Belomesoff from the Cecil Hills area – who disappeared Wednesday after going to meet two men she befriended on Facebook.

Police said the second man, identified only as Belomesoff, she was going to meet does not exist.

Facebook loses friends over privacy settings

New York, May 15 (ANI): Recent privacy changes have prompted some Facebook users to logout for good.

“It doesn”t feel like Facebook is on the side of its users,” said Peter Rojas, a well-known blogger who created Web sites like Gizmodo and gdgt.com. “They”re playing fast and loose with privacy settings.”

Rojas isn”t the only one. Matt Cutts, head of the Web spam team at Google, and Cory Doctorow, co-editor of the popular blog BoingBoing, have also bid adieu to the social networking site.

In a Twitter post, Doctorow blamed a slew of recent privacy changes – and Facebook CEO Marc Zuckerberg – for his decision to leave the site, reports The New York Daily News.

“Never made use of Facebook, but privacy awfulness from Zuckerberg has prompted me to delete acct,” he wrote.

What’s more, “delete Facebook account” was among the top 20 trending searches on Google Friday.

New default privacy settings on Facebook put more of users’ information out there for the whole world to see.

Also, data on Facebook profile is now being shared with “partner sites” like Yelp, Microsoft, Pandora and more. These companies can use profile information to target advertising, as well as to understand what demographics are using or talking about their products.

Zuckerberg recently said in a statement, “The privacy and security of our users” information is of paramount importance to us.” (ANI)

Son reunites with dad after 40 years – via Facebook!

London, May 11 (ANI): A son recently reunited with his father after nearly 40 years – thanks to social networking site Facebook.

Andy Spiers-Corbett, 39, of Darlestone, Leics, came across a profile picture of a man that looked like an older version of himself.

And much to his surprise, the person in the picture turned out to be his dad Graham Corbett, 61.

“When I saw him my heart just started pounding. I just knew it was him,” the Daily Star quoted Andy as saying. (ANI)