Social Media und Recht
In: Stiftung & Sponsoring: das Magazin für Non-Profit-Management und -Marketing, Heft 4
ISSN: 2366-2913
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In: Stiftung & Sponsoring: das Magazin für Non-Profit-Management und -Marketing, Heft 4
ISSN: 2366-2913
In: Versicherungsmagazin, Band 60, Heft 1, S. 30-31
ISSN: 2192-8622
In: The Canadian review of sociology: Revue canadienne de sociologie, Band 49, Heft 4, S. 411-425
ISSN: 1755-618X
Les investigations policières sur les médias sociaux sont composées de l'activité individuelle et institutionnelle. Au lieu de supplanter les institutions policières, les utilisateurs individuels augmente son champ d'application, et sont souvent impliqués dans ce processus sans même le savoir. Cela produit une visibilité qui combine le mandat et l'impunité de la police avec les optiques uniques sur la vie quotidienne des individus. Après avoir proposé un cadre théorique expliquant la pertinence sociologique des investigations policières sur les médias sociaux, je considère la réponse à l'émeute à Vancouver en 2011 comme un exemple de la manière dont la police adaptent au volume de l'information sur des sites comme Facebook.
In: Innovative Verwaltung: die Fachzeitschrift für erfolgreiches Verwaltungsmanagement, Band 34, Heft 1-2, S. 40-40
ISSN: 2192-9068
In: Zeitschrift für Politikberatung, Band 4, Heft 4, S. 176-176
In: Social Media in South India, London: UCL Press, ISBN: 978-1-911307-93-8
SSRN
All parts of human communication existence has been improved through the use of new media technologies and especially through the use of social media which is reflected directly and indirectly on social innovations sui generis. Social innovation should be the game of ideas of equal interaction of different subject using the special life within the life that exists in the virtual world of new technologies. To able to use social media in proper way within social innovation process we have to take into the account that social media are: cheapest form of interaction; accessibility – everybody can be involved within social innovation through social media networks – previously it was reserved only for the organizations well equipped with equipment and personnel. Social media can be used for producing opportunities for creative construction of a new model of citizen participation through education within social innovation process while, in the same time, journalists becomes a mediators of democratic participations of citizens. Social networks have emerged as a critical factor in information dissemination, search, marketing and influence discovery. The capacity of any society to create of steady flow of social innovations depends on a huge amount of presumptions even to be able to link and interact, in proper way, of social media and social innovation, but it is very difficult to control social media, regardless how skilled individuals are involved as a starting point of social innovation dissemination. So, where is the solution? Within the society as the whole, having in mind that manipulation should be replaced with transparency and responsibility of each step of social innovation process through social media. Why? The one word is the answer – it creates TRUST. Creation of transparency and responsibility is both, direct and indirect creation of the most important issues for the proper existence of society – TRUST in the existence system. The most important for connecting people, ideas and resources, within the field of the use of digital technology, are the intermediaries. Namely, those are the social networks which will connect people, ideas and resources for the social innovations, through social media and interacting with them. Of course, within Social media and Social innovations the most important intermediaries are the people, depending on their wishes and capabilities to do the change and to be a change – for the benefit of the society as the whole.
BASE
All parts of human communication existence has been improved through the use of new media technologies and especially through the use of social media which is reflected directly and indirectly on social innovations sui generis. Social innovation should be the game of ideas of equal interaction of different subject using the special life within the life that exists in the virtual world of new technologies. To able to use social media in proper way within social innovation process we have to take into the account that social media are: cheapest form of interaction; accessibility – everybody can be involved within social innovation through social media networks – previously it was reserved only for the organizations well equipped with equipment and personnel. Social media can be used for producing opportunities for creative construction of a new model of citizen participation through education within social innovation process while, in the same time, journalists becomes a mediators of democratic participations of citizens. Social networks have emerged as a critical factor in information dissemination, search, marketing and influence discovery. The capacity of any society to create of steady flow of social innovations depends on a huge amount of presumptions even to be able to link and interact, in proper way, of social media and social innovation, but it is very difficult to control social media, regardless how skilled individuals are involved as a starting point of social innovation dissemination. So, where is the solution? Within the society as the whole, having in mind that manipulation should be replaced with transparency and responsibility of each step of social innovation process through social media. Why? The one word is the answer – it creates TRUST. Creation of transparency and responsibility is both, direct and indirect creation of the most important issues for the proper existence of society – TRUST in the existence system. The most important for connecting people, ideas and resources, within the field of the use of digital technology, are the intermediaries. Namely, those are the social networks which will connect people, ideas and resources for the social innovations, through social media and interacting with them. Of course, within Social media and Social innovations the most important intermediaries are the people, depending on their wishes and capabilities to do the change and to be a change – for the benefit of the society as the whole.
BASE
In: Hart studies in information law and regulation volume 1
In: Why we post. UCL Press: London, UK. (2016)
This book presents an ethnographic study of social media in Mardin, a medium-sized town located in the Kurdish region of Turkey. The town is inhabited mainly by Sunni Muslim Arabs and Kurds, and has been transformed in recent years by urbanisation, neoliberalism and political events. Elisabetta Costa uses her 15 months of ethnographic research to explain why public-facing social media is more conservative than offline life. Yet, at the same time, social media has opened up unprecedented possibilities for private communications between genders and in relationships among young people – Costa reveals new worlds of intimacy, love and romance. She also discovers that, when viewed from the perspective of people's everyday lives, political participation on social media looks very different to how it is portrayed in studies of political postings separated from their original complex, and highly socialised, context.
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Social media platforms have empowered the democratization of the pulse of people in the modern era. Due to its immense popularity and high usage, data published on social media sites (e.g., Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr) is a rich ocean of information. Therefore data-driven analytics of social imprints has become a vital asset for organisations and governments to further improve their products and services. However, due to the dynamic and noisy nature of social media data, performing accurate analysis on raw data is a challenging task. A key requirement is to curate the raw data before fed into analytics pipelines. This curation process transforms the raw data into contextualized data and knowledge. We propose a data curation pipeline, namely CrowdCorrect, to enable analysts cleansing and curating social data and preparing it for reliable analytics. Our pipeline provides an automatic feature extraction from a corpus of social media data using existing in-house tools. Further, we offer a dual-correction mechanism using both automated and crowd- sourced approaches. The implementation of this pipeline also includes a set of tools for automatically creating micro- tasks to facilitate the contribution of crowd users in curating the raw data. For the purposes of this research, we use Twitter as our motivational social media data platform due to its popularity.
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In: Sales-Business: das Entscheidermagazin für Vertrieb und Marketing, Band 20, Heft 7-8, S. 39-39
ISSN: 2192-8320
ch. 1. Introduction to scoial media -- ch. 2. Introduction to principles of sport communication, marketing, and social media -- ch. 3. Social networks and real-time platforms -- ch. 4. Blogging -- ch. 5. Photos, video, and podcasting -- ch. 6. Search marketing -- ch. 7. Mobile marketing -- ch. 8. Email marketing -- ch. 9. Planning and measuring a successful social media program.
"Once celebrated for connecting people and circulating ideas, social media are facing mounting criticisms about their anticompetitive reach, addictive design, and toxicity to democracy. Known cumulatively as the "techlash," journalists, users, and politicians are asking social media platforms to account for being too big, too engaging, and too unruly. In the age of the techlash, strategies to regulate how platforms operate technically, economically, and legally, are often stacked against individual tactics to manage the effects of social media by disconnecting from them. These disconnection practices-from restricting screen time and detoxing from device use to deleting apps and accounts-often reinforce rather than confront the ways social media organize attention, everyday life, and society. Reckoning with Social Media challenges the prevailing critique of social media that pits small gestures against big changes, that either celebrates personal transformation or champions structural reformation. This edited volume reframes evaluative claims about disconnection practices as either restorative or reformative of current social media systems by beginning where other studies conclude: the ambivalence, commodification, and complicity of separating from social media"--