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  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 06/27/2012 1 Comments

    Facebook Feeds Our Self-esteem

    I bet it makes you feel good when people like your posts on Facebook. I know it makes me feel good when my status updates are liked. (And it makes us editors feel good when you *cough* become a fan of our magazine's Facebook page *cough*.)

    It's no surprise then that according to the research published online this month by the journal Computers in Human Behavior, the 526 million people who log on to Facebook every day may be boosting their self-esteem in the process.

    "Despite the name ‘social networks,' much user activity on networking sites is self-focused," said Brittany Gentile, a University of Georgia doctoral candidate who looked at the effects of social networks on self-esteem and narcissism.

    Gentile, along with University of Georgia psychology professor Keith Campbell and San Diego State University professor Jean Twenge, asked college students to either edit their social networking page on MySpace or Facebook or to use Google Maps. Those who edited their MySpace page later scored higher on a measure of narcissism, while those who spent time on their Facebook page scored higher on self-esteem.

    "Editing yourself and constructing yourself on these social networking sites, even for a short period of time, seems to have an effect on how you see yourself," said Campbell, who heads the department of psychology in the University of Georgia Franklin College of Arts and Sciences and co-authored the book The Narcissism Epidemic: Living in the Age of Entitlement. "They are feeling better about themselves in both cases. But in one they are tapping into narcissism and in the other into self-esteem."

    MySpace reported 25 million users as of June 2012. MySpace users participated in the experiment in 2008, when the site had 115 million active users. Facebook users participated in 2011. On both MySpace and Facebook, students scoring higher in narcissism reported having more friends on the site.

    A total of 151 students, ages 18-22, completed the Narcissistic Personality Inventory (NPI) as a part of the study.

    "The NPI measures trait narcissism, which is a stable personality trait," Gentile said. "But spending 15 minutes editing a MySpace page and writing about its meaning was enough to alter self-reports of this trait, suggesting that social networking sites may be a significant influence on the development of personality and identity."

    The differences in site format may be one reason why MySpace led to higher narcissism whereas Facebook merely produced higher self-esteem.

    "The two sites operate differently," Gentile said. "On MySpace, you don't really interact with other people. The pages resemble personal Web pages, and a lot of people have become famous on MySpace, whereas Facebook has a standard profile and a company message that sharing will improve the world."

    Several previous studies found increases over the generations in both self-esteem and narcissism. These new experiments suggest the increasing popularity of social networking sites may play a role in those trends.

    "Social networking sites are a product and a cause of a society that is self-absorbed," Campbell said. "Narcissism and self-esteem began to rise in the 1980s. Because Facebook came on the scene only seven years ago, it wasn't the original cause of the increases. It may be just another enforcer."

    Social networking should not be seen as an answer to building self-esteem, he says, but the fact that people may get a jolt when logging on doesn't mean they should stop either.

    "Ideally, you get self-esteem from having strong relationships and achieving goals that are reasonable and age-appropriate," Campbell said. "Ideally, self-esteem is not something you should take a short cut to find. It is a consequence of a good life, not something you chase."

    (Story materials provided by the University of Georgia/April Reese Sorrow.)




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 06/07/2012 0 Comments

    Is Your LinkedIn Secure?

    As we all continue to adapt to a world in which social media is endemic, security must remain a concern.

    This week, we learned that a Russian hacker exposed 6.5 million LinkedIn user name/password combos, posting them online to show weak security, produce some chaos and, well, just ‘cause.

    It looks like everyone is changing their LinkedIn passwords now, but chances are you’re info hasn’t been released (6.5 million is but a fraction of the site’s 150+ million users).

    Visit LastPass and you can easily determine (free and securely) if your precious password was exposed.

    Image (CC) UNC-CFC-USFK



  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 11/15/2011 0 Comments

    Flattr: Democratized Content & Reward

    You've got a keen insight into selecting speakers. Your budget doesn't. Would it help if you had a couple hundred dollars extra to give to each speaker? Or for a large event, maybe a couple thousand bucks? I propose it would be in your best interest to start working with Flattr now.

    If a certain speaker is greatly appreciated by the audience, Flattr enables your delegates to decide how much money to give them. We're not talking about charging your attendees more to participate in your event; we're talking a very democratic system to reward the speakers (and even peers) that add the most value to an event.

    This is but one possibility when meetings and events embrace Flattr, the microfunding platform co-founded by Linus Olsson.

    Read our November story about Flattr and Olsson with the official One+ iPad and Android tablet apps or grab this PDF.




  • Posted by Jason Hensel at
    12:00AM 09/15/2011 0 Comments

    Virtual Rendezvous: MPI's Turntable Room

    Music is one of the top things in life that can break silos and bring people together. It draws attendees to events, and it can calm nerves. It's a potion that can change your worldview or cause action. 

    Turntable—an online social networking site—uses the power of music to bring people together. Some of us here at MPI have been playing around on it for a few weeks and have found that it has opened communication lines more than any kind of forced team get together. 

    Here's how it works: Once you enter a room, your avatar will be facing five turntables. Depending on the room you enter, those spots may already be occupied by DJs. If a space is open, click on a turntable, and you then become a DJ. Use the search frame on the right to add songs to your set list. Each DJ plays one song, moving from left to right, so that no one person can hogged the show. Everyone can vote if the song being played is lame or awesome. If a song received too many lame votes, it skips to the next DJ. Awesome votes award the DJ with points (for pride, not prizes). There's a chat window at the bottom, too. 

    Now we want you to share your music and socialize with us. We created an MPI room (Virtual Rendezvous) just for you. Please join us and turn everyone on to some of your favorite tunes. 

    I'll be in the room the rest of the day. I hope to see you there.  




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 07/18/2011 0 Comments

    App = Network, Deals

    Next time you attend a conference (such as MPI's World Education Congress in Orlando, July 23-26, of course!), you may want to check out a new-ish smartphone app that uses social elements and location-based shopping data.

    Unsocial is an app developed by AppTango. It is not a normal “check-in” app like Foursquare or Gowalla. It is specifically designed for business conferences and help attendees reach out to others at the events. Once logged in, you can integrate your LinkedIn account so users know who you are and your business background. Once you find a session you wanted to attend, the app allows you import the event into your Google calendar.

    So it helps with organization and time-management when at a conference. But it pushes deals and data based on your location as well.


    Unsocial partnered with a brand new advertising company called DealNet. Within the app, DealNet had their own page that would display local deals around the convention. Lead by founder and CEO Idan Miller, this innovative mobile advertising doesn’t bombard you with useless and annoying ads. It locates where you are and uses daily deals from other websites (Groupon, LivingSocial) or deals direct from the stores and finds discounts for the user within the respective city. Therefore, instead of clicking on the link and buying something off a website, you can walk right into the nearby store.


    Check out this brief interview with the CEO of Unsocial, from thedroidguy.




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 07/11/2011 0 Comments

    Free: Social Networks & Networking

    "I've become convinced that understanding how networks work is one of the most important literacies of the 21st century."

    That's how Howard Rheinhold introduces this "mini-course" on networking and social networks.

    Citing works and references to human networks of centuries past through to virtual communities and smart mobs and how to self-organize, Rheingold packs a bevy of valuable history into this video. It ends with a discussion of copyright law and net neutrality as ethical conflicts of individual freedom vs. institutional control.




  • Posted by Michael Pinchera at
    12:00AM 07/06/2011 1 Comments

    Google Plus: For Businesses

    Another new project from Google, trying to leverage the social media-sphere. By the numbers, I presume you, dear readers, haven't had the chance to explore Google+, indeed, many people who received invitations to the beta launch couldn't even sign up because the demand was so significant.

    Despite that, ReadWriteBiz shares some valuable insight into how businesses can start getting involved with Google Plus (or fail that, get started thinking about integrating your brand with this new offering).

    In their push to bolster usage and interest in Google+, the tech giant is even retiring some much-loved brands, such as Blogger and Picasa, by integrating them into the Google+ beast...which hopes to take on Facebook.