Tag Archive for Facebook

Twesume is Resume on Twitter

Whats A TwesumeSean Weinberg, COO, and co-founder of RezScore, a free web application that reads, analyzes, and grades resumes instantly, says that a 140-character Twitter resume could land your next job.  He calls it a Twesume.

Just like it sounds, “Twesume” unifies Twitter and your resume. The RezScore COO explains that a Twesume is a short bio or resume condensed into 140 characters or less. Sometimes paired with the #twesume hashtag, the Twesume can be tweeted, messaged or emailed to potential employers.

Mr. Weinberg told Mashable the great thing about the Twesume is that it’s a completely flexible, living document. Did you get promoted? No problem, just tweet the addition to your resume. Relocate? Totally fine.

Twesumes help job seekers get noticed by companies who use social recruiting. With the Twesume, a job seeker can introduce himself and engage with an employer in less time (and space) than a traditional resume and cover letter could ever manage.

If you’re interested in jumping on the Twesume bandwagon, all you need is a Twitter account and something to say. Once you have your Twitter account squared away (be sure to have a picture, bio, and some followers/followees), write your very own Twesume. While the Twesume can be anything you like, try to include this information: what you do, an accomplishment, a goal, skills, and/or a link to a detailed profile or website.

Santa Claus: World traveler and toy expert. 300+ years of management experience. Looking for a position in the entertainment industry. http://tinyurl.com/c9ursdp #twesume

Tweet this to your followers, DM to a specific employer, or use it as your Twitter bio. It really is as simple as that.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

R Social Networks Bad 4 U?

R Social Networks Bad 4 U?The average U.S. Facebook user spends 6.5 hours a month on the site. There is growing global evidence that using social networks have a negative impact on their users. Not only do social networks open their users to malware (PDF) and identity theft, but the latest research from around the world suggests that social media can impact user’s emotional well-being.

Facebook can make you feel badBuzzFeed reports that social scientists at the University of Michigan looked at the impact of social networking. The UofM researchers released new research that using Facebook can make you feel bad. The U of M research published in the online journal Plos One found that Facebook use predicted declines in the well-being of surveyed participants.

Facebook

The Michigan research indicates that using Facebook negatively impacts how people feel from one moment to the next. It also impacts their overall life satisfaction. As UM social psychologist Ethan Kross explained to BuzzFeed:

On the surface, Facebook provides an invaluable resource for fulfilling the basic human need for social connection. Rather than enhancing well-being, however, these findings suggest that Facebook may undermine it.”

University of MichiganBuzzFeed points out that the results are just another piece in a larger stack of evidence. The evidence says that increased hours per month spent on Facebook could have a harmful effect on our lives. Professor Kross told the LA Times, “We measured lots and lots of other personality and behavioral dimensions … none of the factors that we assessed influenced the results. The more you used Facebook, the more your mood dropped.”

The Michigan study tested for and discounted alternative reasons that might account for Facebook’s negative impact on happiness. However, the article claims the deceased life satisfaction of Facebook users has more to do with behavioral patterns than the service itself.

The article equates Facebook use with gambling. The author cites Alexis Madrigal‘s article in the Atlantic, “The Machine Zone.” The Atlantic article says that Facebook users, similar to those who play slot machines, are unwittingly lulled into a time-distorting rhythm. They are lulled by repetitive and sometimes rewarding tasks — like looking at an endless stream of your friends’ photos. This behavior can mimic the deleterious effects of gambling and even addiction. The article claims this kind of problem stems from Facebook’s savvy design and engineering. Facebook takes advantage of how humans are wired to keep users on the site.

Social networks in China

China's Beihang UniversityTechEye also points out a study from researchers at China’s Beihang University. The Chinese study claims social networking sites are generating a lot of anger. The study, by Rui Fan, Jichang Zhao, Yan Chen, and Ke Xu, examined human emotions on China’s Twitter-like microblogging site Sina Weibo.

After reading 70 million messages from 200,000 users of Weibo, the researchers found that anger spreads faster and wider than other emotions like joy. The TechEye article suggests that posts you write out of anger will have more impact than those expressing happiness. The researchers also found that users with a larger number of friends have a more significant sentiment influence on their neighborhoods. According to the article, the Chinese researchers found that anger among users correlated much higher than that of joy. They concluded that angry emotions could spread more quickly and broadly in the network.

Angry tweetsIf a user sent an angry message, researchers looked at how likely the recipients were to also send out an angry message or retweet the same emotion. The BuzzFeed article also references a German study. The German study found that Facebook’s social pressures created noticeable stress and feelings of envy. These are emotions that could, ultimately, lead to people abandoning the social network.

Social networks FOMO

A Pew Research Center report released in May 2013 reinforces the risks Facebook faces. According to BuzzFeed, younger users told Pew the stress of needing to manage their reputation on Facebook contributes to their lack of enthusiasm for the social network. Nevertheless, the site is still where a large amount of socializing takes place. The teens reported feeling they need to stay on Facebook to not miss out.

social media as an industry ranked third to last in consumer satisfactionThe BuzzFeed article concludes that future social media networks will have to figure out have to survive if they make us sad. The question isn’t exclusive to Facebook. In a recent survey, social media as an industry ranked third to last in consumer satisfaction. Social networks ranked below the airline industry. They state that it’s not hard to imagine a future where users will demand social platforms that are not only intensely engaging but also keenly aware and respectful of how our psychological state works.

As Madrigal notes in his post, “fighting the great nullness at the heart of these coercive loops should be one of the goals of technology design, use, and criticism.” Facebook has succeeded in its mission to connect the world. But we’re only beginning to understand what that means for humanity.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Social Media – It’s All About Me

Social Media - It's All About MeSocial media sites such as Facebook (FB) and Twitter are a narcissist magnet, according to recent study from the University of Michigan. The U-M researchers published their results online in Computers in Human Behavior.

University of MichiganTechEye says the Michigan researchers found that college students and their adult counterparts use social media in differing ways to bolster their egos and control perceptions of others, the report suggests. Elliot Panek, a University of Michigan researcher said that social networking is about making your image, how you are seen, and also checking on how others respond to this image.

College-age students love using Twitter to make their opinions and views seem important. He told CBC News that college students social media tool of choice is the megaphone of Twitter. “Young people may over evaluate the importance of their own opinions,” Professor Panek said. “Through Twitter, they’re trying to broaden their social circles and broadcast their views about a wide range of topics and issues.”

TwitterAdults who show narcissism tend to prefer Facebook, which works in the same way. Middle-aged adults usually have already formed their social selves and they use social media to gain approval from those who are already in their social circles. According to Mr. Panek, Facebook serves narcissistic adults as a mirror. “It’s about curating your own image, how you are seen, and also checking on how others respond to this image,” he said.

So what’s wrong with being a little narcissistic? Plenty. The traits associated with the disorder can stunt the development of close, long-term relationships. What’s more, highly narcissistic people are more likely to react aggressively to criticism and to carry out actions that promote themselves at the expense of others. On the upside, narcissism also correlates with higher self-esteem and low anxiety

Facebook logoThose findings confirm the conventional wisdom that Twitter is the more youthful, millennial, me-centric social network. Facebook is the province of older people who like to showcase pictures of pasta dishes or post status updates about their kids. We’d hazard to say it’s a crutch for people who can’t get out of the house much, but still, seek validation from their peers. Incidentally, the median age of Facebook users has risen from 38 to 41 over the last few years, according to various social media studies. A recent spate of alarmist headlines suggested that teenagers may, in fact, be ditching Facebook.

rb-

Do you like me now?

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Hotmail is Dead

Hotmail is DeadHotmail is deadMicrosoft (MSFT) has completed the transition from Hotmail to the new Outlook.com. The Hotmail replacement has more than 400 million accounts. According to a blog entry at Office.com most Hotmail users will not notice much difference. They can continue to use those accounts as long as they choose and can claim an Outlook email address whenever they like.

HotmailWriting in the company blog, Dick Craddock, Outlook.com’s group program manager said that Hotmail had more than 300 million active accounts that had to be moved. MSFT completed the epic live upgrade in only six weeks. The upgrade from Hotmail to Outlook.com required communicating with hundreds of millions of people, upgrading all their mailboxes, and making sure they preserved every email, calendar, contacts, folders, and personal preference.

The new Outlook email client has several different features from Hotmail, such as two-factor authentication, an updated calendar, and app as well as integration with cloud service Skydrive and Skype. it allowed users to connect easily with Facebook (FB), Twitter, and LinkedIn (LNKD).

GigaOm reports that MSFT will even allow collaboration with Google users. They report that:

.Outlook.com logo.. if you’re reading an email from a Gmail user, you can reply with a chat icon from your Outlook.com inbox. Or, if you and your Google-oriented buddy are collaborating on a document in Microsoft Skydrive (as opposed to, say, Google Drive), you can send an instant message to your Google contact with the click of a button. Microsoft is also rolling out Google Chat integration.

All of these new features haven’t thrilled everyone, Mr. Craddock is quoted in the IBT, “Of course, whenever a widely used consumer service makes any substantial change, there will always be some folks that don’t like it, and that shows up in the feedback…”

Microsoft logoHotmail was one of the first web-based email services. Founded by Sabeer Bhatia and Jack Smith it was launched on July 4 1996 as “HoTMaiL”. Microsoft bought the web email service in 1997 for an estimated $400 million, and it was rebranded as “MSN Hotmail”.

Outlook.com was launched in February 2013.  It’s based around Microsoft’s Metro design language, and closely mimics the user interface of Microsoft Outlook.

rb-

AmazedFor anyone who has ever had to be involved in a hot email upgrade, you should recognize the technical feat moving Hotmail to Outlook.com really was despite occasional problems. During most email system upgrades, anything that can go wrong will go wrong. There will be power or network issues that will interrupt the mailbox transfer across the wire, there will be users with 32 Gb of email messages, there will be people who file their active messages in the trash can (yes, I’ve seen it) there will be strange shared calendars and accounts that just won’t transfer unless you move them item by item to find the corruption.

Kudos to MSFT for migrating Hotmail to Outlook.com, lets see if it matters in the face of Google’s (GOOG) Gmail and Doc’s.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Disposal Dummies Cause Privacy Problems

The article Disposal Dummies Cause Privacy Problems, posted at  SecureWorld Post by Rebecca Herold lays out the privacy problems caused by dumb disposal policies. The article claims that trash-based breaches are worse than ever.

Disposal Dummies Cause Privacy ProblemsThe oldest security and privacy problem, unsecured disposal of personal information, is prevalent today as it was centuries ago reports the author. She says because of the rapidly growing amount of data, in which EMC (EMC) and IDC claim that data is doubling every two years, along with print information, there are even more ways in which disposal-related breaches are occurring. Here are just a few instances I found:

The blog outlines some of the most common egregious information disposal dummy security and privacy mistakes:

  • DTrash canonating print documents with personal information on them to outside groups, like pre-schools and community groups, to use as scrap paper.
  • Selling computers, smartphones, copiers, fax machines, and other computing devices, to recoup some of the investment, but not irreversibly removing the data before the sale.
  • Putting digital storage devices in the trash without first irreversibly removing the data.
  • Putting print documents containing personal information into unsecured dumpsters, and not shredding them.
  • Never throwing away no-longer-needed hard copy and digital devices; letting them accumulate in storage areas, with inadequate or no security, allowing them to be taken by anyone who happens along.

Data disposal is important because breaches caused by poor disposal activities are getting so bad that the article states there are growing numbers of laws explicitly covering disposal, and bills are being proposed at the state and federal levels. The Disposal Rule (part of the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (FACTA) has been in effect since 2005. The blog says FACTA has many very specific requirements that basically all types of businesses, of all sizes, that do most types of credit checks must take when disposing of information in all forms.

In Michigan, data destruction requirements are covered in IDENTITY THEFT PROTECTION ACT MCL Section 445.72a. where destruction of data containing personal information required; violation as misdemeanor; fine; compliance; “destroy” are defined.

MichiganBesides the fact that secure information disposal is now a legal requirement for most businesses, it makes sense to dispose of information securely to prevent privacy breaches. By having effective disposal policies, procedures and supporting technologies in place businesses demonstrate reasonable due diligence.

Ms. Herold argues that all organizations, from the smallest to the largest, need to follow proper information disposal practices or they will experience significant privacy breaches and non-compliance penalties. She presents an action plan to get started:

  • Assign overall responsibility for information security and privacy compliance to a position or department within your organization, which will include responsibility for the disposal of information in all forms.
  • Perform a disposal risk assessment to find exactly how your organization really disposes of all types of information.
  • Create information disposal policies and procedures, or update existing ones, based upon the results of the disposal risk assessment.

The policies and procedures need actions:

  • Locate, inventory, and gather at the end of their business useFilingcabinetfulness all types of digital storage devices, including CDs, DVDs, USB drives, external drives, tapes (yes, many organizations still use them), microfiche (yes, these too), and any other type of storage media.
  • Inventory all types of computing equipment, including not just the “traditional” computers, but also devices such as printers, fax machines, copiers, smartphones, MP3 devices, and any other types of devices that do computing activities.
  • Define acceptable shredding methods and locations for paper documents. Finely cross-shredding hard copy information is recommended, as well as ensuring any contracted shredding company does such shredding on-site.
  • Define acceptable methods of irreversibly removing data from computing and digital storage devices. Degaussers are still often used, in addition to contracted services to wipe storage devices clean.
  • Make sure you include information backups, and all types of information archives, in your disposal procedures. These items are typically overlooked, and many breaches have resulted from such items.

Data destructionThe bottom line for all organizations, the author argues is: You need to make sure there are proper safeguards for information, computing, and storage devices, during the disposal process.

The author concludes with some recommended resources and articles to aid you with improving your own personal, and organizational, disposal practices:

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.