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Author Archives: NLVenosa
Posts: 3 (archived below)
Comments: 4
What do you use YouTube for?
I sometimes feel like I am online much more than I should be. For instance, I probably spend a total of two to three hours on YouTube per day alone. “Two to three hours?! What on earth are you doing on there?” Well, when you’re subscribed to 145 different channels, you have quite a playlist to get through on a semi-daily basis. These subscriptions of mine can range from style gurus to chefs to acoustic performers to comedians. No matter who I’m subscribed to, they are all different in their own way and I enjoy viewing their content.
It’s strange of me that a lot of people don’t use YouTube for the same reasons I do. Many of my friends just consider YouTube a place where they can find viral videos, footage of people injuring themselves while skateboarding, or a multitude of cute videos of animals. But as soon as I mention that I’m a fan of a certain v-logger or something to that effect, I get weird looks as if I’m one of “those” people who mindlessly watch “random” people talk about their lives on the Internet.
So how do the rest of you use YouTube? Do you actually subscribe to your favorite channels and comment on videos (like I do)? Do you just watch music videos? And, regardless of how you use it, do you think YouTube is an effective tool for social communication on the Internet?
(To be completely honest, I just spend too much time every day watching this guy sing covers of popular songs.)
Posted in Assignment 3
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Using Social Media to Find Missing People
According to a local news source in Missouri, families have begun to use social media to locate missing people. This article discusses how social media outlets–Facebook in particular–are being used to locate the missing after natural disasters. The article goes on to describe the different instances of how Facebook is being used to attempt to locate the missing. The first case is about Will Norton, who was on his way home with his father from Joplin High School’s graduation ceremony, was sucked out of the sunroof of their Hummer H3 when Sunday’s tornado hit and has not been seen since.
About 28,000 people have since supported the “Help Find Will Norton” page on Facebook. Recent posts by Presslor reveal the frustration of a family that cannot find a child. A post on Wednesday afternoon listed the hospitals that already have been checked for the teen. Another post said the family was attempting to track his cellphone in hopes of determining his location.
I see this use of social media as being a very positive one. As “bad” as the Internet may seem at times, when it comes to natural disasters or some other type of catastrophe, the Internet seems to be the perfect tool in helping spread large quantities of information through the right channels. When the earthquake hit Haiti a few months ago and the damage was extreme, Twitter was one of the most useful tools for reporting information and posting images of the damage done to the country. I think using Facebook to locate missing individuals makes a lot of sense and has the potential to be extremely helpful in the future.
Posted in Assignment 2
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Facebook = The New Josh Harris?
After watching the 2009 documentary We Live in Public in class, I’ve been trying to be more wary of my privacy settings on various social media outlets. You could probably say I have some weird form of techie OCD when it comes to Facebook; about once a week, I check my privacy settings and friend lists (along with profile and photo album visibility regarding said lists) just to make sure everyone is seeing what I want them to see. On this particular day of appeasing my techie OCD, I came across a strange discovery.
If you have a Facebook account, do the following and tell me you don’t feel like Mark Zuckerberg (*cough* Josh Harris *cough*) is hoarding your internet activity to use at a later time. Go to:
Facebook > Account > Account Settings > Download Your Information (Learn More)
Granted, I wasn’t surprised that Facebook had just weaseled this option in there without any sort of warning or notification (it’s about as common as waking up and seeing your profile layout completely changed for the fifth time), but you have to admit, the idea that Facebook has every wall post, photo album, video, friend on your list, note, event listing, and message thread neatly converted into .html format and then compressed into a huge .zip file is a little strange, to say the least.
After I told Facebook that I wanted to download my information, it took almost a whole day to receive a confirmation e-mail with the link to download MY OWN INFORMATION.
Granted, although it creeped me out a little bit to see everything organized like that, I was actually relieved that this folder didn’t also include everything I had ever posted or written on other people’s profiles. However, you know that the instant someone decides to download their information, any comment or post I had put on their profile will be saved forever for them to see.
After raising an eyebrow at Facebook for 40 minutes as I downloaded my internet life in a .zip file, I began to wonder, “What would make Facebook want to do this?” Other than the rare occasion that eeeeeevery single server for Facebook crashes beyond repair and people lose their files forever, I have a very strange feeling that one day we’re going to have the choice (or necessity) to buy this seemingly useless collection of data.
Posted in Assignment 1
Tagged Facebook, Josh Harris, Privacy, Surveillance, We Live in Public
1 Comment