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Ben Couste Gowri Ramachandran Josh Young Robert Idol. Social Media. Outline. 1. Profiles 2. Reasons for use 3. Effects on business 4. Other consequences 5. Psychological effects. Numbers!. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6IQ_FOCE6I
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Ben Couste Gowri Ramachandran Josh Young Robert Idol
Outline 1. Profiles 2. Reasons for use 3. Effects on business 4. Other consequences 5. Psychological effects
Numbers! • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6IQ_FOCE6I • Gazillions of user accounts: Hotmail 370M, Facebook 600M, Twitter 200M • Flickr has 5 billion pictures, Facebok had 50+ billion (in July 2010) • Twitter users generate 65M tweets a day • Pushing the limits of scalability in computing, inventing new technologies on the way
Big Data • Huge userbase • Devices! (hint: diversity) • Snowball effect (protests in the Middle-East and North Africa) • Aka Justin Bieber’s rise to World Domination™
Global Differences • Certain sites have higher penetration rates in different countries • Russia still uses ICQ and VKontakte • MSN is preferred over AIM across the pond
The Curious Case of VKontakte • Rampant piracy in Russia • No effort from the company to respond to takedown notices • China has its own giants, such as http://www.baidu.com/
The Role of Profiles • Profiles link users to other members • Extensive network results • Social networks important • Public display of connections • Explains reliability of identity
Identity Differences in Profiles • Social networking sites vs. dating sites • More serious deceptions easier on dating sites • Shopping cart of potential (soul|play) mates at your fingertips! • http://www.adopteunmec.com/ • Successful (corporate) model • All sorts of creative solutions
Uses for Social Networking • Online interactions sometimes focus on meeting similar people Table : Mean responses to how likely respondents were to do the following. Higher scores equal more likely (Lampe et al., 2006)
Social Networks as a Business • It’s all about advertising • Brand recognition • Advergames • Monetization of information • The users are the product - they willingly provide information which can be used to target ads • Google Analytics
“Facebook is now the Internet” • Brands are eager to direct their customers to a social page than the traditional corporate site • Do you connect to brands through social media sites?
Using Social Media for Marketing • New ways for to reach consumers • Previously corporate web sites • Companies can create accounts on social media websites • Can create fan pages on Facebook or MySpace • Twitter allows companies to spread information to followers • Rewards for "like"ing a page • Taco bell • Smirnoff Vodka • UNC snoop dog • Food trucks
Viral Marketing • Let your customers do your marketing • Zynga (Farmville) • Minecraft • Will it blend? • OK GO • Social media networks allow companies to access younger markets and particular demographic groups. • Companies can reach consumers who uses mobile devices for product or company research.
Other Consequences • Are corporate social media pages more or less personable than a standard website? • I choose to "like" something • "You have 5 friends who like this”
Privacy Concerns • Burglary is increasingly plausible: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=6331815n&tag=related;photovideo • Facebook is increasingly being used in divorce cases • Personal information is available • Personal opinion groups impact relationships
Cyber Bullying • Defined as, “the use of information and communication technologies to support deliberate, repeated, and hostile behavior by an individual or group, that is intended to harm others.” • Most common among teenagers in middle/high school. • Extreme cases in recent memory have resulted in suicide. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Br7nbQSIyhg
How are Teens Cyber-bullied? • Bullies might exhibit the following: • Pretend they are other people online to trick others • Spread lies and rumors about victims • Trick people into revealing personal information • Send or forward mean messages
Role of Social Networks • 90% of teens are online. • Emergence of popular social networks have facilitated the growth of bullying
Strong links between bullying, depression and suicidal thoughts and attempts • Cyber bullying victims are nearly twice as likely to have attempted suicide as were non-victims • Recent suicide at Rutgers University Effects of Bullying
New Jersey law that mandates anti-bullying training for teachers, administrators and school board members. • Some worry new laws are unconstitutional and limit free speech. • http://www.the33tv.com/news/kdaf-facebook-whitehouse-cyberbullying-story,0,7265899.story What is being done?
Is there a solution? • Parents? • Monitor internet usage • Schools? • Most Cyber Bullying takes place away from campus. administrators struggle with the limits of school authority in dealing with off-campus cyber bullying • Government? • Safe Schools Improvement Act proposed by Congress • What about bullying that results in suicide? • Survey: 69 percent of adult respondents said harassing someone over the Internet should be a punishable crime • Phoebe Prince example
Questions • Facebook is commonly used as evidence in these legal cases. • Name any three of the notable social media types we have mentioned. • Which age group (young, middle-aged, old) is particularly targeted by companies who use social media sites? • Is it easier to present false information on a networking site or a dating site? • To which country does Vkonatke provide services? • Are college users more or less likely to interact with users online whom they know offline? • What are the most common reasons for college users to use Facebook? • Are dating sites being replaced by social media sites? • Who can help create a solution to cyberbullying?
References Donath, J., & Boyd, D. (2004). Public displays of connection. BT Technology Journal, 22 (4), 71-82. How American companies use social media. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://thinkup.waldenu.edu/sales-and-marketing/marketing-and-public- relations/item/12002-how-american-companies-use-social-media Krudy, E. (2010, March 19). New York food trucks turn to Twitter. Retrieved from http://www.reuters.com/article/2010/03/19/us-usa-twitter- idUSTRE62I4P220100319Lampe, C., Ellison, N., & Steinfeld, C. (2006). A face(book) in the crowd: social searching vs. social browsing. Association for Computing Machinery, 167-170.Mohajer, S. (2009, May 15). Foodies flock to Twitter-savvy food trucks . Retrieved from http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30769388/ns/technology_and_science- tech_and_gadgets/ Smalera, P. (2010, June 27). Are dating web sites past their prime?. Retrieved from http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp- dyn/content/article/2010/06/26/AR2010062600189.html