Currently viewing the tag: "social media"

So far, 2013 has been anticlimactic for litigators waiting for an authoritative appellate decision addressing the rules of social media discovery. Although state and federal trial courts have established some basic parameters regarding the accessibility of private social content in litigation, there remains a conspicuous lack of appellate court guidance on [...]

Continue Reading

Less than six months ago, I blogged about citizen reporters using Flickr and other social media sites as fora to organize and rally amidst unrest in the Middle East.  Here in the United States, we find another example of social media being used as an increasingly powerful and common activist tool: this time, [...]

Continue Reading

Over the past decade, internet users have taken part in a continuously changing online experience.  Privacy, one of the most dynamic features of this experience, always seems to be the cause of significant shifts in online behavior.  In the beginning, there were chat rooms resembling the wild west, where users could [...]

Continue Reading

Despite the efforts of Quit Facebook Day, social networking sites are wildly popular. Sites like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and MySpace are increasingly utilized by twenty-somethings that are now entering the workforce. Unfortunately, a large portion of these users are unaware that they are one “I Hate My Job” post away from becoming [...]

Continue Reading
Set your Twitter account name in your settings to use the TwitterBar Section.