Instagram Porn Tags

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Instagram Porn Tags Instagram porn tags Continue Period Time Key Development in Instagram 2010-2012 Instagram launches on the iPhone and grows to 13 employees and up to 30 million users (closing at $50 million under the $500 million estimate). It was acquired by Facebook in 2012. 2013-2016 Instagram introduces features such as videos, direct messages and advertising, and is growing to more than 400 million users. Instagram launched insta-stories in August 2016, with Live Stories later added in November 2016. Year month and date Event Type Details 2009 October 21 Product Kevin Systrom begins work on a project named Burbn. March 5, 2010 Systrom Funding closes the US$500,000 seed funding round with Baseline Ventures and Andreessen Horowitz while working on Burbn. 2010 May 19 Mike Krieger's team joins the Burbn 2010 project on October 6 The Instagram Product launches (from Systrom and Krieger) in the hope of making it easier to communicate through images. It nabs 100K users in one week. On December 12, 2010, Growth Instagram reached 1 million users. 2011 January Instagram product adds hashtags to help users discover both photos and each other. Instagram encourages users to make tags both specific and relevant, rather than tagging generic words like photos, highlighting photos and engaging like-minded people on Instagram. On February 2, 2011, Instagram's funding raised $7 million in Series A funding from a variety of investors, including Benchmark Capital, Jack Dorsey, Chris Sacca (via capital fund), and Adam D'Angelo. The deal values Instagram at about $25 million. Instagram's June 2011 growth affects 5 million monthly active users. September 2011 Instagram growth hits 10 million monthly active users. 2011 September Version 2.0 Instagram product goes live on the App Store (iOS) and includes new and live filters, instant tilt shift, high-resolution photos, additional boundaries, single-click rotation and updated icon. On April 3, 2012, the Instagram product was released for Android phones running the 2.2 Froyo version of the OS, and it is downloaded more than a million times in less than one day. April 9, 2012 Facebook is buying Instagram for about $1 billion in cash and shares. On April 9, 2012, Instagram's funding raises $50 million from venture capitalists for a stake in the company; The process values Instagram at $500 million. On April 30, 2012, Growth Instagram reaches 50 million monthly active users. In June 2012, the video exchange service is launched in a short form. On December 17, 2012, Instagram updates its Terms of Service, revealing the right - starting January 16, 2013 - to sell photos of users to third parties without notice or compensation. [18] 2013 Instagram's growth hits 100 million monthly active users. 2013 May Instagram Product Presents Photo Photo and Photos of you, a new tab in the user's profile that lists all the photos on which he or she is tagged. In July 2013, Instagram made it easier to access posts by adding links to embedded photos and videos. The September 2013 Instagram rise hits 150 million monthly active users. 2013 October Instagram Controversy deletes the account of Canadian photographer Peter Collins after Collins posted a photo of herself in which pubic hair was visible under her bikini bottom. Collins argues that deleting the account was unreasonable because it did not violate any of Instagram's terms. The November 2013 Instagram controversy is in response to a 2013 investigation from the BBC about Instagram's role in selling illegal drugs. The BBC found that users, mostly in the US, posted images of the drugs they were selling and then completed transactions through instant messaging apps such as WhatsApp Messenger. Relevant hashtags are blocked as part of the company's response. In November 2013, an Instagram hosted a sponsored post-advertising aimed at American users. In December 2013, Snapchat announced that it would poach Emily White, Instagram's director of business operations. Emily White will join Snapchat in January. On December 12, 2013, Instagram adds Direct, a feature that allows users to send photos to specific people directly from the app. Instagram's main intention with Direct is to compete with messaging services, including Snapchat. In 2014, March Growth Instagram reached 200 million monthly active users. In June 2014, June Product Instagram launched a new series of editing tools, allowing users to customize images features such as brightness, contrast, glare and shadows. 2014 August Team Global Head of Business and Brand Development - a new position for Instagram - announced. Former Facebook regional director James Kwarles has been appointed. 2014 August 21 Instagram Product makes itself more ad-friendly by introducing a suite of business tools aimed at brands that offer ideas and analytics related to their use of the image-sharing network. 2014 December Instagram growth hits 300 million monthly active users. In a similar incident with Collins, Instagram deleted the Australian Photography and Fashion Agency's Instagram account for photos including pubic hair sticking out of the bottom of a bikini. 2015 June Product Instagram strengthens its advertising capabilities by testing ad formats that encourage users to do things like installing an app, subscribing to e-mail newsletter or a link to the seller's website to purchase the product. 2015 September 9 Instagram product lets you ads for all advertisers - twice the 15-second limit given to users. 2015 September International Instagram ads are released worldwide. September 2015 Instagram growth hits 400 million monthly active users. 2015 October Product Instagram launches Boomerang, an app where the user shoots one second of five photos, which has evolved into a quiet video that plays forward and then changes in loop. November 17, 2015 Instagram product kills support from app-reading channels. 2016 February Instagram product starts allowing users to easily switch between multiple accounts. In March 2016, The Daily Star reported on a million explicit films found on Instagram. The videos were discovered by tech blogger Jed Ismael, who says he discovered more than a million movies on the site. On March 15, the Instagram product switches its channel from chronological to algorithmically managed best messages in the first place. May 11, 2016 Instagram products introduce a new look, as well as an updated icon and design app for Instagram. Inspired by the previous app icon, the new icon is a simpler camera, and the rainbow lives in a gradient form. In 2016, May Product Instagram announces the launch of new business tools, including analytics, that allows users to see, host and reach audience demographics. Instagram's June Growth announces that it has more than 500 million monthly active users. 2016 Instagram June announces instant translation feature. 2016 July Instagram Product announces that it will begin allowing users to filter out comments streams - giving users a choice about which comments are acceptable or not for themselves. It also starts allowing users to completely disable comments. Instagram Stories launches On August 2, 2016. The product works like Snapchat Stories: Users can post 24-hour ephemeral photo and video slideshows that disappear. Instagram CEO Kevin Systrom openly admits that the feature is copied from Snapchat based on the success of Snapchat stories. The feature is seen as part of Instagram's goal of attracting users from Snapchat. In August 2016, the August Instagram product brings an image zoom that allows users to zoom in on images. In September 2016, Instagram removed Photo Maps from its mobile apps, claiming that the feature was not widely used on the platform. October 13, 2016 Instagram launches a desktop client on Windows 10 for the first time, which can be downloaded through the Windows Store. 2016 November 21 Instagram Product Launches Video Live which allows users to stream live on Instagram for up to an hour. Instagram videos are not stored and are removed from the service after the user is broadcasting. Instagram also launches disappearing photos and videos Instagram Direct on the same day, and the images and videos sent using this method disappear after a certain amount of time. On December 15, 2016, Growth Instagram announces that it has more than 600 million monthly active users. 2017 February 22 Instagram product launches a feature that allows users to post multiple photos in one post, in a slideshow like fashion. In September 2017, the TikTok competition, a short video exchange service and social networks, will start. On May 20, 2018, Product Instagram introduces a new dumb feature that allows users to hide posts from certain users in their feed without logging an account. On June 20, 2018, Product Instagram announces the launch of IGTV, a video platform designed to compete with YouTube. Users will now be able to upload videos for up to 10 minutes, while creators and accounts with a wider audience can upload videos for up to an hour. IGTV will have a special button in the Instagram app, in addition to the standalone app released on the same day. 2019 October Product Instagram removes the After activity tab, where users could see that other users they followed would like to comment on other similar actions. 2020 May Product Instagram is launching a new Guide feature that allows users to interact with health-focused creators to participate in a mental health discussion. 2020 July-August Instagram Product Rolls Out Drums, a short-form video feature designed to compete with TikTok 64 Timeline Pinterest Snapchat Timeline Snapchat Timeline Facebook Timeline of Social Media - Well hello there's a good lookin', @burbn Twitter account, October 21, 2009 - Siegler, MG (March 5, 2010). Burbn's funding is going down smooth. Base, Andreessen Back Stealthy Launch Location.
Recommended publications
  • A Theoretical and Empirical Study of Social Media As a Crisis Communication Channel in the Aftermath of the BP Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Ill
    A Theoretical and Empirical Study of Social Media as a Crisis Communication Channel in the Aftermath of the BP Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill ill By Kylie Ann Dowthwaite Date: 15 April 2011 University: Copenhagen Business School Masters: Cand.merc. MCM External Councilor: Nicolaj Hoejer Nielsen No. of pages: 81 STU: 184.127 Kylie Ann Dowthwaite | April 2011 Acknowledgement Several people have contributed to this research throughout the study period and thereby helped me to carry out this work. First of all I would like to thank my supervisor Nicolaj Hoejer Nielsen for his comments and support throughout my master thesis. I would also like to thank all the key informants and survey respondents for their cooperation and contribution to the work. Finally, I would like to express my gratitude to my fiancée, family and friends for their support and encouragement through the whole study period. Kylie Ann Dowthwaite Kylie Ann Dowthwaite | April 2011 Executive Summary On the 20th of April 2010 the largest oil spill in the history of the US occurred and BP was the main responsible party. This lead to a massive crisis communication effort, where multiple organisations were involved and social media was utilized on a scale never seen before in BP. Within classical crisis communication the Situational Crisis Communication Theory (SCCT), by Coombs, states that an appropriate response strategy has to be chosen depending on the crisis responsibility of the organisation. In the field of crisis communication for social media the theoretical framework is sporadic and very operational with Gonzalez-Herrero & Smith and Conway et al.
    [Show full text]
  • OIG 13-A-08 Independent Evaluation of NRC's Use and Security of Social
    EVALUATION REPORT Independent Evaluation of NRC’s Use and Security of Social Media OIG-13-A-08 January 23, 2013 All publicly available OIG reports (including this report) are accessible through NRC’s Web site at: http:/www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/insp-gen/ UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20555-0001 OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL January 23, 2013 MEMORANDUM TO: R. William Borchardt Executive Director for Operations FROM: Stephen D. Dingbaum /RA/ Assistant Inspector General for Audits SUBJECT: INDEPENDENT EVALUATION OF NRC’S USE AND SECURITY OF SOCIAL MEDIA (OIG-13-A-08) Attached is the Office of the Inspector General’s (OIG) independent evaluation report titled, Independent Evaluation of NRC’s Use and Security of Social Media (OIG-13-A-08). The report presents the results of the subject evaluation. Agency comments provided during a December 7, 2012, exit conference have been incorporated, as appropriate, into this report. Please provide information on actions taken or planned on the recommendations within 30 days of the date of this memorandum. Actions taken or planned are subject to OIG followup as stated in Management Directive 6.1. We appreciate the cooperation extended to us by members of your staff during the evaluation. If you have any questions or comments about our report, please contact me at 415-5915 or Beth Serepca, Team Leader, at 415-5911. Attachment: As stated CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .................................................................................... IV AGENCY COMMENTS ..................................................................................... VIII CHAPTER 1: SOCIAL MEDIA MEASUREMENT .................................................. 1 NRC Narrowly Defines Social Media Success .................................................. 1 NRC Has made Progress Against All its Social Media Objectives ...................
    [Show full text]
  • Indigenous Connections and Social Media: Māori Involvement in the Events at Standing Rock
    Indigenous Connections and Social Media: Māori Involvement in the Events at Standing Rock India Fremaux A thesis submitted to Auckland University of Technology in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Communication Studies (MCS) 2019 School of Communication Studies, Faculty of Design and Creative Technologies Abstract The whirlwind development of digital ICTs has had significant implications for Indigenous peoples and their movements towards social and political change. Digital ICTs facilitate global Indigenous connections, assist the rapid diffusion of information and present a decentralised outlet for Indigenous perspectives. However, for Indigenous groups, issues of access, cultural appropriation and misrepresentation remain. With the aid of digital ICTs, the Standing Rock movement successfully united Indigenous cultures across the world. This research focuses on Māori in Aotearoa (New Zealand) who expressed passionate support on social media and even travelled thousands of kilometres to stand in solidarity with the Standing Rock Sioux. The aim of this study is to determine the interest and involvement of Māori in these events via the qualitative analysis of two data sets drawn from participants; in-depth interviews and personal social media posts. Each participant was chosen for their vociferous support of the Standing Rock movement and their identification as Māori. The findings revealed that while participant interest stemmed from a number of areas, particularly pertaining to Indigenous affinity and kinship, it was social media that initiated and sustained that interest. These results indicate that there are deep connections between Māori and the Standing Rock Sioux and the role of social media in facilitating and maintaining those connections was complex.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Thesis
    University of Huddersfield Repository Penni, Janice The Online Evolution of Social Media: An Extensive Exploration of a Technological Phenomenomen and its Extended Use in Various Activities Original Citation Penni, Janice (2015) The Online Evolution of Social Media: An Extensive Exploration of a Technological Phenomenomen and its Extended Use in Various Activities. Masters thesis, University of Huddersfield. This version is available at http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/id/eprint/28332/ The University Repository is a digital collection of the research output of the University, available on Open Access. Copyright and Moral Rights for the items on this site are retained by the individual author and/or other copyright owners. Users may access full items free of charge; copies of full text items generally can be reproduced, displayed or performed and given to third parties in any format or medium for personal research or study, educational or not-for-profit purposes without prior permission or charge, provided: • The authors, title and full bibliographic details is credited in any copy; • A hyperlink and/or URL is included for the original metadata page; and • The content is not changed in any way. For more information, including our policy and submission procedure, please contact the Repository Team at: [email protected]. http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/ THE ONLINE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL MEDIA: AN EXTENSIVE EXPLORATION OF A TECHNOLOGICAL PHENOMENOMEN AND ITS EXTENDED USE IN VARIOUS ACTIVITIES By Janice F.Y. Penni A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER by Research In THE SCHOOL OF COMPUTING AND ENGINEERING STUDIES THE UNIVERSITY OF HUDDERSFIELD April 2015 © Janice Penni, 2015 Abstract The rise and popularity of Social media technologies has created an interactive and communicative global phenomenon that has enabled billions of users to connect to other individuals to not just Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn; but also with media sharing platforms such as Instagram and Pinterest.
    [Show full text]
  • Enhancing Current Feedback Processes Through Social Media
    Enhancing Current Feedback Processes through Social Media Monitoring An exploratory study of Social Media and Social Media monitoring practices within an MNC looking to combine new practices with traditional customer-centric processes. Author(s): Fredrik Bergstrand, Tutor: Professor Hans Jansson Growth Through Innovation and International Marketing Subject: Business Administration Emily A. Finlaw, Level and semester: Master's level, Spring 2011 Growth Through Innovation and International Marketing Growth Through Innovation and International Marketing Master Thesis, 2011 ENHANCING CURRENT FEEDBACK PROCESSES THROUGH SOCIAL MEDIA MONITORING An exploratory study of Social Media and Social Media monitoring practices within an MNC looking to combine new practices with traditional customer- centric processes. Fredrik Bergstrand & Emily A. Finlaw “Today, everything is about Social Media” – Andreas Kaplan and Michael Haenlein “Just as the eyes are the windows to the soul, business intelligence is a window to the dynamics of a business” – Cindi Howson “[Social Media monitoring] is not a car - but it is a vehicle for acquiring and sharing knowledge” – definition from Lexalytics, sited from Mike Marshall “Your most unhappy customers are your greatest source of learning.” – Bill Gates “Knowledge is not good if you don´t apply it” – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Acknowledgements It is our pleasure to thank all those who made contributions to this thesis over the past few months and throughout this learning journey. We would first like to thank Volvo Construction Equipment Region International for making this thesis possible. Thank you to Lars-Gunnar Larsson and Hanna Bragberg for creating a cutting-edge topic which has manifested into the inspiration for this thesis.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Media Marketing in the Fashion Industry: a Systematic Literature Review and Research Agenda
    Social Media Marketing in the Fashion Industry: A Systematic Literature Review and Research Agenda A thesis submitted to The University of Manchester for the degree of Master of Philosophy in the Faculty of Science and Engineering 2020 Nishtha Kochhar 10081036 Department of Materials School of Natural Sciences Faculty of Science and Engineering 2 Table of Contents CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................... 9 1.1 RESEARCH RATIONALE ............................................................................................................... 13 1.2 RESEARCH PURPOSE AND AIM .................................................................................................... 14 1.3 RESEARCH OBJECTIVES ............................................................................................................... 15 1.4 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY ......................................................................................................... 15 CHAPTER 2 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY ........................................................................... 17 2.1 SOCIAL MEDIA AND FASHION ..................................................................................................... 17 2.2 CHAPTER SUMMARY ................................................................................................................... 23 CHAPTER 3 METHODOLOGY ...................................................................................................... 24 3.1
    [Show full text]
  • Anxiety: an Epidemic Through the Lens of Social Media Holly M
    Pace University DigitalCommons@Pace Honors College Theses Pforzheimer Honors College Summer 7-2018 Anxiety: An Epidemic Through the Lens of Social Media Holly M. Wright Honors College, Pace Univeristy Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/honorscollege_theses Part of the Community Psychology Commons, Social Psychology Commons, and the Theatre and Performance Studies Commons Recommended Citation Wright, Holly M., "Anxiety: An Epidemic Through the Lens of Social Media" (2018). Honors College Theses. 188. https://digitalcommons.pace.edu/honorscollege_theses/188 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Pforzheimer Honors College at DigitalCommons@Pace. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors College Theses by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@Pace. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Anxiety: An Epidemic Through the Lens of Social Media by Holly M Wright BA Directing, International Performance Ensemble Mentored by Ion Cosmin Chivu An Undergraduate Thesis Presented to the Pforzheimer Honors College and Faculty of the School of Performing Arts Pace University New York City In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree Bachelor of Arts, Directing, IPE with Honors Presented April 26th, 2018 Graduation: May 22nd, 2018 Wright 1 Abstract: Anxiety: An Epidemic was originally inspired by the mental health crisis in my hometown, Palo Alto, California, and evolved to specifically focus on social media-related anxiety. I examined the question: How has social media evolved over the last decade and what effect does the proliferation of social media have on the young adult population? I hypothesized that social media would have a predominately negative effect, especially on young women, and set out to create a theatrical piece inspired by my research.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Media and Digital Technology
    Social Media and Digital Technology Part 1 - Social Media & Social Part 2 - How “Big Data” will Networking change your life • Learn the history of social • What is “Big Data” and who media and look at some of is collecting it? How will it the more familiar names be used for marketing? We such as Facebook and will look at advances in Twitter and how they are digital technology hardware used. We will discuss the and what might lie ahead. good, the bad and the ugly We will also explore how or social media and digital technology is used in consider some points to everyday life. ponder. Social Media and Digital Technology Part 3 - Social Media and Part 4 - Learning for life Journalism through MOOCs • From courtrooms to • MOOCs (“massively open communities to staffing, online classes” – Take a tour social media are changing of freely available online the way we get news – and courses and tutorials. challenging traditional Discuss implications of notions of what “news” is. accessibility as well as the cost and quality of higher education. We will explore some online education possibilities. Social Media and Digital Technology Part 5 - New media, privacy & Part 6 - Harnessing the the First Amendment wisdom of crowds online • New media make new law – • Crowds can be stupid and or at least, pose new brutal, but under the right questions for old law. How circumstances, crowd has the concept of “privacy” collaboration can lead to changed? How do we do stunningly good results. For jury selection? What kinds example, we will talk about of information do we trust – Wikipedia, discuss its flaws or do not trust? and give you a chance to actually make some changes to the entries.
    [Show full text]
  • Standard Issue
    Networking Knowledge_________ Volume 13 Issue 2 December 2020 Standard Issue Edited by Bissie Anderson Photo by Kyndall Ramirez on Unsplash: https://unsplash.com/@kyndallramirez Networking Knowledge 13 (2) Standard Issue (December 2020) Editorial Introduction BISSIE ANDERSON, University of Stirling This standard issue features six contributions from postgraduate and early career scholars working at the intersections of media, communications, education, sociology, and technoculture. In spite of the numerous challenges faced in 2020 due to the COVID-19 global pandemic and its knock-on effect on universities around the world, we are delighted to be closing the difficult year with the publication of this collection of articles. This is a reason for celebration – celebration of the authors whose work is featured herein, of cross-cultural and cross-disciplinary connections that allow us to engage in academic dialogue across borders, of our resilience as a global collective of researchers, and our ongoing commitment to knowledge exchange. The articles in this standard issue differ in their objects of inquiry – from sound in digital games, social networking sites, and digital technology in education, to broadcast journalism and romantic comedies, but they broadly converge around a common focus on temporality and time. Between them, the articles present a good mix of empirical work and significant conceptual development, moving forward theoretical debates in the fields of media and communications. Concepts are either developed, through in-depth engagement with the extant literature (Amaral 2020; Martins and Piaia 2020), or tested through empirical studies using a variety of methods – from surveys (De Andrade and Calixto 2020) to digital ethnography (Polivanov and Santos 2020) to participant observation and interviews (Gomes, Vizeu, and De Oliveira 2020).
    [Show full text]
  • The Role of Social Media in Intercultural Adaptation: a Review of the Literature
    English Language Teaching; Vol. 11, No. 12; 2018 ISSN 1916-4742 E-ISSN 1916-4750 Published by Canadian Center of Science and Education The Role of Social Media in Intercultural Adaptation: A Review of the Literature Basim Alamri1 1 English Language Institute, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia Correspondence: Basim Alamri, English Language Institute, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Received: September 17, 2018 Accepted: November 10, 2018 Online Published: November 14, 2018 doi: 10.5539/elt.v11n12p77 URL: https://doi.org/10.5539/elt.v11n12p77 Abstract As international students, sojourners, and immigrants arrive at host cultures, they usually employ certain means and strategies to adjust to the traditions and norms in these cultures. The present article provides a review of the literature about the impact that social networking sites (SNSs), as one of these strategies, have on the process of intercultural adaptation. The article also points out the definitions and several types of SNSs and a number of common models of intercultural adaptation. The literature shows that SNSs have been used for several purposes during the intercultural adaptation process such as: (1) to remain in contact with their family members and friends in their home countries, (2) to obtain social capital, and (3) to socially adjust in educational settings. The pedagogical implications derived from the literature are manifested in threefold: connections and relationships, community, and acculturation. Keywords: intercultural adaptation, adjustment, social networking sites (SNSs), social media 1. Introduction Newcomers to foreign cultures have implemented various technologies to help them in the cultural adaptation and acculturation process. In recent years, the most common and useful techniques utilized by the newcomers is social media, which plays a pivotal role in connecting people around the globe together in order to share and exchange knowledge and cultural traditions.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Media Use in Generation Z: the Rise in Anxiety and Depression Sudipti Kumar Director of Research and Content Development
    Social Media Use in Generation Z: The Rise in Anxiety and Depression Sudipti Kumar Director of Research and Content Development At the recent National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS) annual conference, social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, author of The Coddling of The American Mind, shared ​ ​ alarming data around the rise of anxiety and depression in teens. The correlation between this spike and the timeline of social media uptake paints a disturbing picture of what generation Z students are facing in schools today, and how middle school girls are a particularly vulnerable group. The Research Much of the research that Haidt discussed reflects the findings of researchers Dr. Jean Twenge & Gabrielle Martin, professors at San Diego State University. In particular, their 2018 analysis of over one million 8th, 10th, and 12th graders between the years 1991–2016 showed that psychological well-being declined precipitously after 2012. ​Th​ e data from their study also 1 found that teens who spent more time on electronic communication and less time on non-screen activities had lower overall psychological well-being.1 Mean happiness, 8th, 10th, and 12th graders, Monitoring the Future Source: Jean Twenge Another paper just released in February 2020 by the same authors in the​ Journal of Adolescence ​studied more than 200,000 young people from the US and the UK. In this data set, they compared heavy users of digital media (five or more hours a day) versus light users (one hour or less a day). Heavy data users were 48-171% more likely to be unhappy or have suicide risk factors such as depression or suicidal ideation.2 ​ The study also found, as Haidt mentioned in his talk, that girls were more likely to spend their online time on social media sites and boys were most likely to spend it on gaming devices, thus compounding the issue for young girls versus boys.
    [Show full text]
  • The History and Spread of American Fake News and What Organizations Can Learn from Others to Fight It
    THE HISTORY AND SPREAD OF AMERICAN FAKE NEWS AND WHAT ORGANIZATIONS CAN LEARN FROM OTHERS TO FIGHT IT A thesis submitted to the School of Communications of Webster University in St. Louis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in Communications Management October 2018 Webster University, St. Louis, Missouri © Copyright by Shandi S. Greve Penrod ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 2018-2019 The author hereby grants to Webster University permission to reproduce and distribute publicly paper and electronic copies of this thesis in whole or in part for educational purposes GREVE PENROD ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This thesis was made possible through the guidance of the professors in the Webster University School of Communications and Walker School of Business, including Professor Jim Curtis, whose Digital Literacy and Social Engineering seminar class partially inspired this paper, and Professor Robert Dixon, who led me through the research paper process. I would also like to express my gratitude to my husband, Jason, and my daughter, Cypress, for their support throughout my graduate school career and the writing of my thesis paper. They never once complained about the hours that my studies, and especially the researching and writing of my master’s thesis paper, took from my family. Thank you to Jason for taking over both of our shares of housework when I couldn’t help as much as I wanted. Thank you also to Jason for proofreading my many graduate papers and every word of this thesis at least twice. I literally could not have succeeded without you. Thank you also to Edson C.
    [Show full text]