Whether you're age 14 or 43, think twice before you post something online. Once it's published, it's there forever -- whether or not you delete it.
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Ally Greer's curator insight,
November 1, 2013 8:31 PM
Show your brain who's boss and beat cognitive biases that can harm your critical thinking skills!
Christina Guenther's curator insight,
October 18, 2013 12:58 AM
Don't forget to press the "view more" button I promise its worth it!
Carolyn Lasky's curator insight,
September 28, 2013 5:47 PM
It's not everyday that people think a parody account with horrible grammar and terrible hashtags is actually your brand's official account. Poor Burlington Coat Factory.
Ally Greer's curator insight,
October 7, 2013 1:49 PM
Reading about how brains work is nothing short of fascinating. Here are some of the most intersting: Attention bias: When you only consider a few options or outcomes even though there are truly many more possibilities. Backfire effect: When you reject evidence that proves you wrong even though you know the evidence is correct. Bias blind spots: Failure to recognize your cognitive biases (how meta!) Frequency illusion: When something you just learned about suddenly appears everywhere. Reactance: Doing something opposite what you're asked to do to demonstrate your freedom of choice. |
Andrew Federici's curator insight,
November 15, 2013 4:57 PM
A bit of fun for Friday--can you imagine how much money collectively was spent on these ads? And what the metrics of success were?
Chris Parsell's curator insight,
November 25, 2013 10:10 AM
How can you start off a Monday without the Pets.com mascot?
GwynethJones's curator insight,
December 15, 2013 3:08 PM
I still have some of the Pets.com videos on a HD and I have the puppet, too!!!
GwynethJones's curator insight,
October 20, 2013 6:58 PM
French Bread Pizza - a guaranteed mouth burn in the first 3 bites!
Guillaume Decugis's curator insight,
August 30, 2013 1:19 AM
Very meta but interesting read. Are we in a matrix?
Ludovic LE MOAN's comment,
January 12, 2014 4:31 AM
I am surprised to find this article since I believe myself, we are part of a simulator. My idea to try to prove it should be to find a gap in our time scale. If we can demonstrate the time is not continious, we will have found this evidence. Like a computer time is sharing by processus, it should be the same for universe!
Guillaume Decugis's comment,
January 12, 2014 7:23 PM
I've just read an interesting SF novel on that topic: Redshirts by John Scalzi http://www.amazon.com/Redshirts-A-Novel-Three-Codas/dp/0765334798 Interesting read on that topic!
Christopher Yeh's curator insight,
November 26, 2013 12:28 PM
I don't think those habits will make you smart, but I love the graphic!
Community Village Sites's curator insight,
August 12, 2014 4:09 PM
And make sure you don't miss: and Average Face Of Women Across The World |
Facebook recently announced a change it is making for its teenage audience: they wil now be able to post photos and other content publicly (I didn't even realize that they weren't able to do this before!).
Apparently, if you were between the ages of 13 and 17, you didn't previously have the option to share content to the public - you could only post to "friends" and "friends of friends." To keep up with SnapChat and Instagram, Facebook decided to lift this.
Frankly, I'm not sure it will make a difference in the teenage usage of Facebook; they're using it less beacuse it's increasingly filled with brands, ads, and parents.
Facebook can try to suck up to the teenage demographic as much as they want-of course, it's ultimately about business for FB- but making this move is honestly (1) something most teens won't even realize and (2) a futile attempt of being the "cool parent" allowing kids to do something that will ultimately probably cause them trouble, just to win their favor.