Why people post so many annoying personal status updates

From Barking Up The Wrong Tree—I suspect that many people will find the answer provided as “annoying.”

 

 

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Why social media isn’t the magic bullet for self-epublished authors

From the Guardian, first published online by Ewan Morrison.

Another tech bubble? A critical look at the whole social media sales pitch, which should make my consultant friends at the Colorado Independent Publisher’s Association squirm.

It will burst within the next 18 months. The reason is this: epublishing is inextricably tied to the structures of social media marketing and the myth that social media functions as a way of selling products. It doesn’t, and we’re just starting to get the true stats on that. When social media marketing collapses it will destroy the platform that the dream of a self-epublishing industry was based upon.

Ouch.

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Is the Web Driving Us Mad?

From The Daily Beast,

Tweets, texts, emails, posts. New research says the Internet can make us lonely and depressed—and may even create more extreme forms of mental illness, Tony Dokoupil reports.

As one commenter said, “Everything in moderation.”

An update: Proof?

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Does Facebook Turn People Into Narcissists?

A brief article from The New York Times suggests that it’s not necessarily so that narcissism drives our Facebook activities. But apparently Twitter is more appealing to the self-absorbed.

I wonder if “studies” of such earthshaking matters are led by self-important narcissists.

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Why the online obsession with revealing every detail of your life?

From the Guardian, an excerpt:

Facebook and Spotify automatically want to share my every waking action…Don’t get me wrong. I’m all for sharing thoughts, no matter how banal (as every column I have ever written rather sadly proves). Humans will always babble. If someone wants to tweet that they can’t decide whether to wear blue socks or brown socks, then fair enough. But when sharing becomes automated, I get the heebie-jeebies. People already create exaggerated versions of themselves for online consumption: snarkier tweets, more outraged reactions. Online, you play at being yourself. Apply that pressure of public performance to private, inconsequential actions – such as listening to songs in the comfort of your own room – and what happens, exactly?

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Is Facebook Making Us Lonely?

Huh? Two articles, one from the Atlantic and another from The Week address the subject. My question: How can Facebook make us anything, except perhaps stupid for spending too much time on it?

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A Completely Unscientific (Yet Accurate) Look at Social Sites

From Brainz, an “analysis” of digg, redditt, Propeller, Slashdot, myspace, Facebook, Linkedin, and Twitter. I use Facebook, Linkedin and Twitter, but the vast majority of my content is from this blog and my daily posts here automatically post on those three social sites. (It reduces the time on the computer.)

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The Great Tech War Of 2012

From Fast Company:

Apple, Facebook, Google, and Amazon battle for the future of the innovation economy.

 

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A Brave New Book World: How Authors Become Entrepreneurs

From MediaShift, an assessment of social media, e-books, blogging, Facebook, Twitter, and Skype—all this stuff I thought I’d never do:

So this is what it’s like to be an author now – finishing the book is only the beginning. New technologies allow writers to seek out and engage with their readers more than ever before, and to participate in a community of readers and writers that isn’t limited by geography. The drawback is that for many authors who want people to buy their books, social media isn’t optional. In the years to come, the image of a reclusive writer, isolated in his garret, might become an antiquated one, like that of someone pounding out a novel on a typewriter or reading an actual book made of paper.

I’d actually prefer to be the reclusive writer, but it doesn’t auger well for actually selling books to follow that path—one must get with the times, which involves shameless self-promotion.

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The Personal Essay in the Age of Facebook

Via Frank Wilson, “Status Update: The Personal Essay in the Age of Facebook,” by Susan McCallum-Smith. An excerpt:

Context is dependent on time, and time must pass for our lives to accumulate meaning. New media like Facebook and Twitter are interested primarily in the now; these function in the present tense. And sometimes prose constructed in the first-person present tense can demand too much patience from the reader over the long haul; we are forced to live too long in close-up. (Murch once remarked that any movie running over two hours from a single point of view was living on borrowed time . . .) History cannot be accommodated within the present tense—yet our lives are accumulated history and gather meaning through comparisons with what came before. A status update to let everyone know that one is now named Georgina is of interest only if everyone already knew one was originally baptized George.

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