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The Oxford English Dictionary (OED), which considers itself the definitive record of acceptable English words, has just formalized its status as a legitimate noun and verb in relation to social media site Twitter.
The Oxford English Dictionary (OED), which considers itself the definitive record of acceptable English words, has just formalized its status as a legitimate noun and verb in relation to social media site Twitter.
Forget the ties and buy something your father will truly want this year.
Forget the ties and buy something your father will truly want this year.
Think the intelligence services aren't snooping on your private online data? Think again.
Think the intelligence services aren't snooping on your private online data? Think again.
"What's for dinner?" is a question as old as time itself – and it's one of the most frustrating. Now, technology has an answer.
"What's for dinner?" is a question as old as time itself – and it's one of the most frustrating. Now, technology has an answer.
Pinterest claims it's been dogged by complaints from photographers and artists over Pinterest's strict no-nudity whatsoever policy, compelling the social network to rethink its stance.
Pinterest claims it's been dogged by complaints from photographers and artists over Pinterest's strict no-nudity whatsoever policy, compelling the social network to rethink its stance.
By Mike Flacy
Provided by 
According to a recent survey conducted by British job site Reed.co.uk,
approximately 33 percent of employees admit to using social networking
within the office. Facebook was the most popular choice preferred by 45
percent of the people that did admit to logging into a social network.
Facebook was followed by LinkedIn, a social network that's becoming
commonly used to research potential candidates for job openings. Other
choices included video sharing site YouTube, Twitter and various blogs.
Marketing and IT professionals are the most likely to be browsing social
networks at work while engineers and accountants were far less likely
to log into Facebook during the workday.
While two thirds of the respondents believe that companies have a
right to ban social networks within the workplace, less than 30 percent
of the companies in the survey completely block access to all social
networks while another 40 percent limit access to social networks.
Thirty-two percent didn't block any social networking sites or bother to
set up a policy to forbid employees from logging into the networks. Of
the people that did log into a social network on a daily basis, 35
percent claim that it was specifically for business. Ten percent claim
it was for personal reasons and 55 percent went with both options.
While
62 percent of the employees only log into the social networks one to
two times a day, the remainder log in more than three times a day. Five
percent admit to visiting into a social network over ten times a day.
Many employees do attempt to keep social network visits on personal
devices though. Sixty-four percent check networks like Facebook and
Twitter on mobile devices such as a smartphone, but 36 percent do use a
work computer to log into social networks. As more employers look into
how much time employees are spending on Facebook, it's likely that
companies will become more restrictive with network access rights.