www.globalchange.com Linkedin future of business online community or just a phase? Linkedin is the business version of FaceBook or MySpace and had 11 million executives signed up by June 2007. But does this business inline community really work?
Facebook is making major changes to its privacy settings – giving you the opportunity to share your personal information with “everyone” on the internet. But is that wise
Or, to specify only some of your networks, you can use the tags “Autopost twitter, facebook, buzz ” to post to only Twitter, Facebook and Google Buzz . For example: you blog, and you want to share your thoughts on a recent political gaffe. ..
www.directmatches.com DirectMatches is one of the first companies in online business and social networking to launch its service utilizing network marketing for delivery to the market place. The prime market focus is small business professionals, entrepreneurs and network marketers. Promote…
Real-time search engine OneRiot is adding the full feed of data from Google’s Buzz social sharing service to its results. … …
Facebook approached us because they wanted to explain what social plugins are and why they think they will make the internet a better place for everyone. This is what we came up with.
Trending today on T3: Yahoo brings their A game with new iPhone apps, Sprint’s EVO Android powered ‘superphone’ & taking control of your Facebook security settings. For more tech tips, visit blog.makeitwork.com.
Evolutionary, not revolutionary: the next gen iPhone that Gizmodo bought this week. Want to know who can see your Facebook? We show you were to look in the privacy controls!
Social-networking sites like Facebook and Twitter are banned in China by the ruling communist regime. And now their top-think tank is calling them potential risks to national security. State-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences—or CASS—published their “Report on the Development of China’s New Media 2010.” It acknowledges the growing popularity of social-networking sites, and says, “Some Web sites including Facebook, which are utilized by intelligence agencies in the Western countries, caused people to fear their specific political functions.” But a press-freedom advocate Oiwan Lam from Hong Kong In Media, tells Radio Free Asia that Western social-networking sites are being singled out for another reason