Facebook: This is the end of the friendship that we know (I think it is good) Manjoo's article "Facebook is fashion" broadly understands various social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, MySpace I will. According to Manjoo article statistics, Facebook has over 1 billion active users, half of which have been logged into their account everyday (Manjoo p. 223). William Deresiewicz does not mention this in his article "Faux Friendship". By selecting so many people to look at social networking sites, this in turn enables friendship to smoothly integrate into the new electronic lifestyle.
Facebook has offered researchers anonymous data on 57 billion friendships. Facebook connects to big data in ways we have never heard. These national intelligence agencies are at risk from a network security standpoint. It is inside. Media crisis is a temporary crisis in Wall Street stock, but Facebook is a greedy machine. #deletefacebook keeps up with the network and gains momentum as new information rapidly emerges on the Internet, even if there are rumors that 2 billion users will be affected, despite rumors that the signature is getting low It is difficult to keep on.
In the article "Faux Friendship" by William Deresiewicz, he discusses how Facebook and other social media can destroy what we know. We found a great value for a few closest friends but having hundreds of "friends" on Facebook pages is easy now, but Deresiewicz thinks that these "friends" are no longer worth it I will. It is more like a representative of friendship than genuine. The author may think that many of his friends are grateful for social media, but this technology actually quarantines us, goes outside and communicates with just the computer rather than actually talking to anyone We encouraged you to spend your time. I definitely feel that the concept of friendship changes with the advent of social media.
What is the true friendship in the world of hyperconnection driven by unlimited technology? Will it disappear? Or are the "platforms" of various social media such as Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter simply redefining or modifying the concept of modern friendship? If so, what do we know about life on this planet? Will we be happy? Will it encourage Aristotle and promote meaningful existence to advocate? There are some worthy trends to mention, but indeed, I have more questions than answers. Mark Vernon, a researcher at Birkbeck College, London, for example, today announces articles in the United States on the impact of social media and concludes as follows. More meaningful relationship. Yes, we lost a friend. 2