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Social Networking in the Digital Age

An anonymous reader writes "It used to be if you wanted to win more friends, influence more people or make more money, you bought one of those self-improvement tomes and tried to pump up your personality. These days, all you have to do is go online and join a "social networking" site. The pumping will be done for you."

11 of 267 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Musicmobs by deman1985 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Audioscrobbler is another site with a similar purpose. Although it doesn't directly link users together by their musical tastes, it is easy enough to find people who frequently listen to the same artists that you enjoy by looking at the rankings.

  2. Social Networking that is more than just dating? by thened · · Score: 3, Informative

    I help run a website that has social networking aspects, Mediachest.com and have looked around at all the other social networking sites, and they don't really seem to offer much. They either try to replace existing communities with a site that has fewer features than the original or they are worthless, slow lists of people who are essentially strangers. Sure, it is nice if you want to look at profiles of girls without having to pay to contact them, but are any of the sites any more useful than that? Mediachest is more about finding new people and sharing items. It is like the distributed library project but centralized so it is easier to find things. Social networking can be very valuable when trying to find a DVD to watch or a book to borrow. Social networking can be more than just dating.

  3. Yeah, but how accurate are the numbers? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 4, Informative

    While I see some great potential for these types of sites, I have to wonder about the strength or veracity of the social networks they claim to foster. For example, Orkut tells me I'm now "connected" to over 150,000 folks, even though I only have three "friends" added to my profile. Just because I joined to the Debian/Apache/PHP/EFF/Dachshund forums doesn't mean all the other members even know of my existence, or care.

    Still though, it does do wonders for the ego . . .

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  4. Re:Livejournal is definitely not one of them by VE3MTM · · Score: 2, Informative

    I disagree. I use LJ, as do many of my friends (RL and otherwise). Pretty much everyone posts daily or semi-daily. It's almost a closed group of about 15 people, and I know every one of them. There's none of the "cliquey" things you describe going on. If you have these problems with LJ, maybe you should rethink who's on your friends list.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 Whoops, silly middle mouse button...
  5. Re:Orkut? by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'll invite you in. All you need to do is send me your e-mail address. Credit card information is optional.

    --

    I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  6. ecademy.com by Gunzour · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have recently been trying out another social networking site -- ecademy.com. It started in the UK apparently, and is just now starting to get some USA folks on it.

    I've been on Orkut, Friendster, LinkedIn, and now Ecademy. One thing is for sure, there is no such thing as "if you've seen one you've seen them all". Every one of these sites has unique features and a unique atmosphere to it. LinkedIn is very polished and professional and formal. Ecademy is in many way the opposite -- people there will say hi just because they noticed you online, even though you have never met them. The openness of ecademy certainly makes it a lot friendlier.

    All of these sites are tools that can be used or abused just like anything else.

  7. Re:Orkut? by Aliencow · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'll invite people too, but my domain expired today cause I'm a moron...anyways email me at gepeto@aliencow.com, eventually my spam filter will reply to you when my domain is back up...so I guess by tonight I could invite a few Slashbots.

  8. Re:Been there, done that... by dr_dank · · Score: 2, Informative

    I don't like to be asked to quantify my level of friendship with people, it is only my business.

    IIRC, those ratings can only be seen by you.

    --
    Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
  9. Re:Why I don't believe in this by Sloppy · · Score: 3, Informative
    Many still prefer human face to face (or any other body part to any other body part ;) ) contact to the virtual impersonal environment of cyberspace.
    Yes, but the virtual impersonal environment can be an icebreaker, when people are shy or otherwise don't talk as much as they should.

    There was a girl I often saw at local metal shows, but we just didn't talk much, and when we did, the conversations were pretty short. But she mentioned one of these 'social network' sites (a really cheezy and unreliable one too) and out of curiosity I checked it out, "friended" her, and started making journal entries with comments about various local metal shows. So did she. Then we started commenting on each other's journals. We got to know each other better in these "batch mode " communications, and that carried over to when we are in person.

    Not dating or anything like that (nor do I expect that to happen, we'd be pretty incompatible, I think -- though she does happen to be a pretty hot babe :-) but now we're a lot more familiar and friendly. One of these dumb sites turned a near-stranger into a friendly acquaintance. I like that! It makes me want everyone in my local metal scene to get on that cheezy website.

    Ultimately, these things are just another tool, which can be used stupidly or smartly. But having more tools for communication is better, especially given how socially disfunctional people are these days... Ok, maybe the disfunction is a consequence of all the other tools. (e.g. people using computers instead of talking face-to-face) But the computers are not going away, and the people are not getting any less fucked-up, so you might as well use and leverage the tools.

    Identity theft. You can register yourself as Bill Gates, with BG's photo, on Friendster. Chances are, you'll get away with it.
    I think you have a damned good point there. AFAIK, except for celebrities, the potential doesn't seem to be getting abused much, but it's certainly possible. Obviously these networks should be integrated with the PGP WoT. ;-)

    Actually, that would a good challenge for me: Can I explain the PGP WoT to my new non-hacker, Windows98-using, 18-year-old-metal-chick friend? Hmmm...

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  10. Re:The Persuasion Age, what comes after Info Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Here is the full text in case readers slashdot the original:

    The US started out in the "agriculture age". This nation was founded by wealthy
    farmers for the most part. We then graduated to the "industrial age" where
    manufacturing reigned supreme, and peaked in the 1950's. However, eventually
    lower overseas labor rates slowed and then reversed our manufacturing might.
    Then came the "information age" where "knowledge workers" reigned supreme.
    However, cheap overseas educated labor is now cutting into information careers
    also. India cranks out software, financial, and even legal experts the same way
    that factories in China crank out battery-operated toys. Mass-production
    education, and thus mass production "knowledge workers" have arrived at our
    doorstep and want a piece of our pie. Brains are becoming a cheap commodity.

    So what is the next "age" that we as a nation have to shift toward to stay ahead
    of the 3rd world economies? Many analysts trying to figure out a solution to
    this offshoring mess have repeatedly asked, "What comes after information?"

    I am going to make an educated guess based on patterns and trends that I
    observe, and call it "The Persuasion Age". The persuasion age will revolve
    around people, not machines, not physics, and not bits and bytes. Sales,
    marketing, customer service, politics, diplomacy, and entertainment will be the
    primary growth industries, or at least the industries least threatened, in the
    persuasion age.

    Expect "People Skills" schools to pop up all over the same way that IT
    (computer) schools popped up in the decade of the 1990's. Books with titles
    such as "Social Skills for Geeks" and "Learn Persuasion in 21 Days" will appear on
    bookstore shelves. Acting courses will take on the same importance that science
    and math have now. Reading, writing, and arithmetic will not be enough. "Human
    math" will surpass numerical math in importance.

    Nerds and geeks, who enjoyed some notoriety in the information age, will again
    be seen as the bane of humanity. Finding out your child is a nerd will be like
    having a child born without arms or legs. Being "socially crippled" will be
    worse than being physically crippled, because a wheelchair does not keep one
    from wheeling and dealing (no pun intended).

    The US will become like the Ferengi, a species in the Star Trek TV series who
    turned business into a religion. They are the wheelers and dealers of the
    galaxy. Their "Bible" is a set of roughly 300 rules. Here is a sample:

    #6: Never allow family to stand in the way of [business] opportunity
    #27: There's nothing more dangerous than an honest businessman.
    #33: It never hurts to suck up to the boss.
    #48: The bigger the smile, the sharper the knife.
    #60: Keep your lies consistent.
    #121: Everything is for sale, even friendship.
    #141: Only fools pay retail.
    #177: Know your enemies... but do business with them anyways.
    #189: Let others keep their reputation. You keep their money.
    #229: Latinum [money] lasts longer than lust.
    #284: Deep down, everyone's a Ferengi.
    (Curtesy LCS Creations and Leroy C. Smith)

    I personally don't think we could be proud of such a nation, but I suppose it is
    probably inevitable, barring some major global upset. Plus, there is the risk of
    not having the ability to produce anything tangible that we talked about on the
    main page [link].

    Another problem is that the US will not have a monopoly on such "services". Many
    cultures in other nations have been adept dealers and persuaders for many
    generations. And, persuasion is often a localized skill due to cultural and
    language differences. Thus, exporting persuasion will be more difficult than
    exporting computer chips. Thus, I fear that America's Golden Age is coming to an
    end, and we will become just another middle-of-the-road nation among many rather
    than an economic superpower. The Internet Bubble, whi

  11. Re:The Next Big Thing by PetWolverine · · Score: 2, Informative

    You use it however you want to. I use it to highlight comments of people whose past comments I've enjoyed reading. You can set a bonus in your user preferences for users who are your friends, and then when you see someone you want that bonus to apply to in the future, you click the circle next to their name and set your relationship. Combine with mod points, and it becomes a powerful tool for bringing about change in the moderation around here...if you're into that sort of thing. Or, you could find a few people who actually write in their journals regularly, and use the friends system to keep up with their new entries. I also like to check people's posting histories and so on who I find in my fans list, though I do this less now that I have trouble keeping track of who my old fans are and who is new. (If you want me to notice you, put yourself on my freaks list...)

    Anyway, part of what's great about /. is that there's no need to use all the features to have a good experience. You decide your own level of participation.

    --
    I found the meaning of life the other day, but I had write-only access.