MySpace Essays

  • Myspace Or Facebook Analysis

    929 Words  | 2 Pages

    Summary: In Donah Boyd’s, “Myspace or Facebook?” she argues that social media sites create social division among different groups of people, we should acknowledge this because it might help us understand teenagers more according to their preferences of social media. In the article it states that most teenagers think down upon on others that use Myspace instead of facebook. Other facebook users call them “ghetto” and use words signaling that people that use Myspace are from a lower socio-economic

  • Facebook vs. MySpace

    585 Words  | 2 Pages

    Among the fifteen most popular in social media are Facebook and MySpace. Facebook, as the number one leader in social media, explodes above all others in growth, versatility and listening to the demands of the public. Facebook was started by undergraduate college students and grew to surpass all other social media groups (Hartung, Adam). In 2010, Facebook achieved six hundred million active users (Hartung, Adam). Now, as many as nine hundred million users visit on a monthly basis (eBiz). Facebook’s

  • Annotated Bibliography for Advertising on Myspace And Social Networking

    1444 Words  | 3 Pages

    Webliography for MKT 352 Topic : MySpace and other social networking companies as Internet Advertising Revenues. Factors to consider are the business models for these websites, their rising popularity, and the attraction of brands to advertise themselves in social networking websites (especially MySpace) 1. O'Malley, Gavin "MySpace vs. eBay? Site leaps into e-commerce." Advertising Age; September 11 2006, Vol. 77 Issue 37, p6-6, 2/5p, 1 chart, 1c < http://0-search.ebscohost.com.library.ggu

  • Social Networking Safety

    2979 Words  | 6 Pages

    MySpace gained popularity when businesses and bands began using it for advertising. Since the launch of Facebook, both have made social networking part of daily life for millions of people worldwide. Internet relationships have become more popular and face-to-face interactions have become more rare. Though these websites allow friends to stay in touch more easily, they also raise safety concerns. Predators have found ways to gain access to innocent bystanders. The age of account users on these sites

  • Negative Essay: How Social Media Can Control Our Lives

    1158 Words  | 3 Pages

    When was the last time you talked to your friends in person, not over text messages, Facebook or Twitter? In order to answer the question you would have to think about it first. It is not secret that social media is something that is controlling our lives everyday. In fact, it is something that comes natural to society to communicate with others through a screen. Whether it is a computer screen or phone screen, this screen is taking over our lives. In fact, according to www.pewinternet.org , “81%

  • Social Networking Taking Appropriate Responsibility

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the case of the MySpace lawsuit of 2006, a 14 year-old girl and her mother filed a lawsuit against MySpace after the girl met with a man she had contact with over the website. The meeting started out with dinner and a movie, but ended with the girl getting raped by the 19 year-old man. In Kevin Alexander’s essay titled, “MySpace Not Responsible for Predators”, he places the blame on the mother and the daughter stating that “The girl, as traumatic as her experience was, should be held responsible

  • Tech Savvy Teens

    1490 Words  | 3 Pages

    generation of teenagers. The use of Socially Interactive Technology’s or SIT’s such as online networking sites, text messaging, and instant messaging (IM) are becoming more and more popular among teens (Pierce). Social networking sites such as FaceBook, MySpace, and Twitter are examples of SIT’s. SIT’s can be used by anyone, but they are most popular among teenagers. Though SIT’s are meant to be fun ways to interact with friends, they can also be very dangerous. Socially Interactive Technology’s are dangerous

  • Dangers of Social Networking Sites

    914 Words  | 2 Pages

    to connect friends and family together. Now, many predators use sites such as Facebook or Myspace to find their prey. This is the source of what parents are stressing about to their children. While many who use social media are enjoying meeting new people, they are also becoming distant from contact with real people and they are involved in a very surprising and dangerous environment. Around 2005, Myspace and Facebook were popping up on many computer screens; they allowed people to create a profile

  • Ethical Considerations in Customer Relationship Management

    1410 Words  | 3 Pages

    com/editorial/newsletter_article.cfm?nl=dmdirect&articleId=1066948&issue=20423 CPM-Solutions. Retrieved July 29, 2007, from CRM Health Portal Web site: http://www.cpm.com/providers/solutions/emarketing.cfm Poulsen, Kevin (2007, May 14). Attorneys General demand that MySpace give up sex offenders. Wired, Retrieved July 29, 2007, from http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/05/attorneys_gener.html Richards, Johnathan (2007, July 25). Sex offenders can use social sites say police. Times Online, Retrieved July 29, 2007

  • The Impact of Social Media on Communication and Job Hunting

    2042 Words  | 5 Pages

    Facebook is a social site that helps people to communicate not only from their computer but also from their phones or Tablets. In the article “Facebook Needs Phone to Battle Google for Mobiles Ads,” it is stated that “800 million people use Facebook for Android, IPhone or some other app to access the platform and connect with their friends, family, and colleagues” (Clint). Clint is telling us that Facebook is a social media that helps people to get in contact with other colleagues and family, also

  • Scrutinizing Dana Fleming's Article on Protecting College Social Network Users from Themselves

    913 Words  | 2 Pages

    invention of the telephone years ago to social networks today (440). Students’ online identities come at a price, allowing job recruiters, school administrators, ... ... middle of paper ... ...gle network (443.) Some schools use material from Myspace and Facebook in their judicial proceedings while others turn a blind eye to the site (442.) Through the ineffective use of rhetorical tools and the cognizant arrangement of this essay, Fleming fails to manage the distance between herself and the

  • We Must Safeguard Children from Online Predators

    916 Words  | 2 Pages

    the internet permits one to be anonymous. While the internet is a great tool for children to use for homework assignments, expand on their personal interests and socialize with friends, it also poses tremendous threats to them. In the article, MySpace Not Responsible for Predator, a 14-year-old child met with a 19-year-old man who allegedly raped her. The rapist had used an alias to lie about his age to get her attention. This is an example of an unfortunate incident where a child became the

  • SoundCloud: A German Sartup Case Study

    1670 Words  | 4 Pages

    paper ... .... "How SoundCloud Is Avoiding Becoming The Next MySpace." Forbes. Forbes Magazine, 10 Aug. 2012. Web. 10 Mar. 2014. . "SoundCloud co-founder Eric Wahlforss: "How we built SoundCloud”." European startups, entrepreneurship and innovation news: Whiteboard. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Mar. 2014. . "SoundCloud » The Official SoundCloud Blog." SoundCloud. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Mar. 2014. . Van Buskirk, Eliot. "SoundCloud Threatens MySpace as Music Destination for Twitter Era." Wired.com. Conde Nast

  • Impact of Digital Technology on an Aspect of Contemporary Culture

    1086 Words  | 3 Pages

    great effects to their privacy and that of others (Hand 4). Firstly, by having exposed information, which is available for the world to see, there are increased chances of getting tracked and getting hurt. Taking an example of the social sites like MySpace, the ability of an individual to post information related to their personal lives may subject one to potential harms. In addition, it makes the person in question feel exposed to some uncertainties. Monitoring devices like the chips, whose popularity

  • Rise in the Fitness Culture

    1429 Words  | 3 Pages

    “Do you even lift bro?” has become the new slang phrase in this period where fitness has become a popular trend across the globe. It has become apparent that fitness, for the most part, dominates many aspects of social media – from infomercials on the best workout videos to the plethora of “how to” fitness videos on YouTube. However, the cause of this fitness boom has been debated for quite some time. Many people assume that the rise in fitness occurred because of its correlation to longevity, but

  • Cyber Bullying And The Attention Step: Cyberbullying

    2326 Words  | 5 Pages

    and Megan had decided that she would be better off if they just stayed away from each other. Megan’s mother let her have a MySpace account, under her watchful eye. This was a privilege that Megan had earned back after she and her former friend, from down the street, had been caught after they had made up an account with a picture of a pretty girl to talk to boys. While on MySpace she had “met” with a boy that had recently moved to Missouri and was being homeschooled. Megan begged her mother to let her

  • The Impact of Social Media on Children and Adolescents

    3076 Words  | 7 Pages

    parts of technology. Due to this vastness of the topic the report will focus on the effects that Social Networking or Social Media have on young generation. The involvement of children in many social networking websites such as Facebook, Twitter, and MySpace etc. these days is the main reason why parents should be aware of the nature of these websites and must encourage their adolescents to use these websites in a healthy way. Also, this report provides the different statistics related to these Social

  • Youthful Indiscretions: Should Colleges Protect Social Network Users from Themselves and Others?

    974 Words  | 2 Pages

    England Journal of Higher Education, winter of 2008 issue, Fleming poses the question of responsibility in monitoring students’ online social networking activities. With a growing population of students registering on social networks like Facebook and MySpace, she introduces the concern of safety by saying, “like lawmakers, college administrators have not yet determined how to handle the unique issues posed by the public display of their students’ indiscretions.” However, while Dana Fleming emphasizes

  • Cyber Bullying Essay

    1797 Words  | 4 Pages

    bullying is bullying through technology. Cyber bullying is very dangerous and it needs to be stopped, it is causing too much harm to people today. How people execute cyber bullying can happen through any type of media. Whether it is Facebook, twitter, Myspace etc. People actually disguise themselves as other people to become friends with them and all of a sudden turn on them and post negative things on the internet to hurt them so everyone else can see (i-SAFE Inc, 2015). It is really scary that you never

  • Mark Knapp Relational Model

    1980 Words  | 4 Pages

    relationships with an ex-boyfriend of mine through Mark Knapp's relational stages model. I will be referring to my ex-boyfriend as Johnny throughout this paper. Johnny was the one who initiated our relationship through an unusual channel for the time: Myspace. Initiating is the first stage of the Knapp’s relationship model and it is the stage where a person shows interest in making contact with another and you must demonstrate you are worth that person's time (Alder, pg 288). I can remember it quite clearly