Study tracks Net’s social implications
Internet March 23rd, 2001
A three-year study, conducted by Pew Internet and American Life Project, has some interesting results … like, "People worry about online privacy but easily give it away" and "57 percent of the people still without Internet access have no intention of getting it" … change is hard :-)
Related Posts
- Salesforce.com on Social Networking -- Ross Mayfield posted an excerpt from an interview with the CSO of Salesforce.com in regard to Social Networking. The interview was conducted by IBDN, but I wasn’t able to find a direct link. However, here’s a quote from the M2M...
- Encouraging richer social connections -- According to researchers at the University of Washington which was referenced in this NY Times article “…companies would benefit from encouraging richer social connections,” The Times article also mentions … “Google may be great, but people are greater. Paraphrased roughly,...
- Salesforce to record $25 million in revenue -- not bad for an ASP "… privately held Salesforce has 2,800 companies that pay it to manage about 50,000 people worldwide, and it is on track to record some $25 million in revenue this year. "The quality of our revenue...
- Social Networking and FOAF -- Ben Hammersley talks about FOAF in an article published in the Guardian: “Our online cocktail parties will be instantly mapped by who knows who, and our business relationships might just get a little more transparent (imagine knowing who your colleagues...
- Take Back the Net Day -- April 3rd: "Take Back the Net day and Buy Something Online" … yeah sounds great! … but no one has any money! ...
- Virtual Apple ][ Online Disk Archive -- These guys have an entire library of old Apple ][ programs online that run within the browser. They use an ActiveX control that's an Apple ][gs virtual machine emulator running within the IE... Sweet! [with Virtual Apple]…”you can now relive,...
- Gopher Net Nostalgia -- A back in my day, we surfed the net with rodents… Via Wired News: “Back in 1992, when “yahoo” was something cowboys yelled and “ebay” was just pig Latin, the University of Minnesota developed a new way of looking at...
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
About