Elvis wrote:
Found this while surfing:You can also find support through resources like Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Psychology Today's online listing of [b]counselors and therapists[/b].
What if it's product placement?
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Elvis wrote:
Found this while surfing:You can also find support through resources like Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Psychology Today's online listing of [b]counselors and therapists[/b].
crikkett wrote:Elvis wrote:
Found this while surfing:You can also find support through resources like Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Psychology Today's online listing of [b]counselors and therapists[/b].
What if it's product placement?
Elvis wrote:Nordic wrote:If you have enough money to invest in the stock market AND short a stock, short the shit out of FB.
I wish I could.
Schadenfreude, sure. But in this case it's a sure thing. Watch it fall to five or six bucks and stay there for a good long time.
Young people are abandoning it by droves.
Somebody must be making a lot of money off the Facebook stock "fail."
Hacker group Anonymous has outed the creep who allegedly bullied Canada teen Amanda Todd — who killed herself on October 10.
Anonymous says Kody Maxson, 30, a Facebook employee from New Westminster, British Columbia, is the one who made explicit photos of Amanda Todd public. This started a chain of events that led to Todd's depression, drug use, alcohol abuse and eventual suicide. Anonymous posted Maxson's name, age, username and location onto a pastebin page.
http://www.heavy.com/news/2012/10/anonymous-names-creep-who-allegedly-bullied-amanda-todd-into-suicide/
http://motleynews.net/2012/10/16/has-amanada-todds-online-extortionist-turned-himself-in/
Got some new intel, A man was arrested in vancover who happened to be named Dakota Maxson for sexual assault charges.
Facebook Fraud
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oVfHeWTKjag
Veritasium
Published on Feb 10, 2014
Evidence Facebook's revenue is based on fake likes.
My first vid on the problem with Facebook: http://bit.ly/1dXudqY
I know first-hand that Facebook's advertising model is deeply flawed. When I paid to promote my page I gained 80,000 followers in developing countries who didn't care about Veritasium (but I wasn't aware of this at the time). They drove my reach and engagement numbers down, basically rendering the page useless. I am not the only one who has experienced this. Rory Cellan-Jones had the same luck with Virtual Bagel: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-...
The US Department of State spent $630,000 to acquire 2 million page likes and then realized only 2% were engaged. http://wapo.st/1glcyZo
I thought I would demonstrate that the same thing is still happening now by creating Virtual Cat (http://www.facebook.com/MyVirtualCat). I was surprised to discover something worse - false likes are coming from everywhere, including Canada, the US, the UK, and Australia. So even those carefully targeting their campaigns are likely being duped into spending real money on fake followers. Then when they try to reach their followers they have to pay again.
And it's possible to be a victim of fake likes without even advertising. Pages that end up on Facebook's "International Suggested Pages" are also easy targets for click-farms seeking to diversify their likes. http://tnw.co/NsflrC
Thanks to Henry, Grey, and Nessy for feedback on earlier drafts of this video.
Hunter » 21 Apr 2014 11:22 wrote:Yea that was my mistake, I should have kept my contacts to people I actually share opinions and viewpoints with, activists and freelance writers and such instead of everyone from high school, most of which I really have nothing in common with anymore and really dont care to get back involved in their lives anymore. I didnt understand what FB really was as I was letting all these people in to my friends list, now that I know if I did it again I would keep the list small and with people I can actually communicate with and share interests with. It can certainly be good for those purposes.
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