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The 27 member states agreed on Friday, April 18, to introduce as new offences “public provocation to commit a terrorist offence, recruitment, and training for terrorism” which would be punishable “also when committed through the Internet.”
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I like this tidbit at the end: “in women’s water polo, bloggers are allowed three posts a quarter and one at halftime; in fencing or bowling, 10 posts are allowed for each day or session.”
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“It is two years since Ceop was created, establishing a powerful alliance of British and foreign police forces, computer experts, charities and schools…” I once met with these people – disturbing stuff. RH.
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Networks are the best outcome for citizen journalism. They guarantee the quality that many user-generated content initiatives lack while acknowledging that old school journalism can no longer continue as it has been operating.
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ThisNext seeks community managers who can manage online staff and develop content in verticals like parenting, gadgets/tech, mens, fashion/beauty, outdoors/fitness and design/living.
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“There isn’t one application that’s good or bad, but if people are unable or unwilling to stop using it, that’s what we look at as a red flag for an intervention.”
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Research, albeit based on a research sample of just 15, suggests that habit is a one of the more important motivations for reading particular blogs regularly.
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Each week the class dissects an aspect of Facebook and looks at the way it works, the psychology behind it and what impression users are trying to convey. The gamut runs from examining status updates to news feeds and from poking to writing comments.
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ere are too many self-proclaimed “SEO experts” and “entrepreneurs” around, clogging up the Twitters. Your contact list, especially. Hard to hunt them down, tho, what with Twitter’s 20-people-per-contact-list-page setup.