Post by afifatabassum on Mar 11, 2024 8:06:25 GMT
Facebook is the social network that more than any other allows granular control of privacy through its control panel. But this granularity can prove to be a labyrinth for the inexperienced user. For this reason ReclaimPrivacy.org has created a bookmarklet (a small JavaScript program that can be executed by the browser) which controls the level of privacy set and automatically makes the necessary changes. Simply right-click the “ Scan for Privacy ” link and add it to your favorites. Then log into Facebook and click on the link you added to your favorites. At this point the scanner will activate and inspect the privacy level, suggesting corrections.
Iwould like to point out an interesting Brazil Phone Number monographic issue of the Ferpi magazine dedicated to stakeholders with an interview with Freeman, father of stakeholder theory , and with two of my contributions: one on the need to also consider and map network stakeholders and the other on the Nestlè crisis .Tim O'Reilly shared his vision of the state of the internet in two fundamental posts . His thesis is that the internet cannot be considered a mere platform, but is becoming a real operating system, which manages incoming requests from the most varied devices and returns a result based on data processing that takes place remotely (" in the cloud”) by functional subsystems (archive, localization, identity, search, communication, etc.). Given that at the moment only Google, Amazon and Microsoft have a credible presence at the heart of this operating system, i.e. the "archive and processing" infrastructure, let's see how leadership is distributed in the various subsystems.
Google is a leader in search, advertising, maps, email, and access to video – Amazon manages access to media (books, music, videos) through its e-store and can boast a huge database of user opinions, tastes and payments – Microsoft barely maintains its dominance over the browser, but only with the arrival of Ray Ozzie did it begin to develop its web services with conviction: in particular the search engine, maps, email and IM communications. – Apple dominates access to media through iTunes and enabling devices, application hosting (App Store) and the payments subsystem – Facebook has its strength in the construction of the broadest social graph which means mapping over 450 million users The big question is: in the future will we live in a network made up of many suppliers integrated horizontally through open standards or just one large player that will be able to offer a vertically integrated service capable of satisfying user needs better than others?
Iwould like to point out an interesting Brazil Phone Number monographic issue of the Ferpi magazine dedicated to stakeholders with an interview with Freeman, father of stakeholder theory , and with two of my contributions: one on the need to also consider and map network stakeholders and the other on the Nestlè crisis .Tim O'Reilly shared his vision of the state of the internet in two fundamental posts . His thesis is that the internet cannot be considered a mere platform, but is becoming a real operating system, which manages incoming requests from the most varied devices and returns a result based on data processing that takes place remotely (" in the cloud”) by functional subsystems (archive, localization, identity, search, communication, etc.). Given that at the moment only Google, Amazon and Microsoft have a credible presence at the heart of this operating system, i.e. the "archive and processing" infrastructure, let's see how leadership is distributed in the various subsystems.
Google is a leader in search, advertising, maps, email, and access to video – Amazon manages access to media (books, music, videos) through its e-store and can boast a huge database of user opinions, tastes and payments – Microsoft barely maintains its dominance over the browser, but only with the arrival of Ray Ozzie did it begin to develop its web services with conviction: in particular the search engine, maps, email and IM communications. – Apple dominates access to media through iTunes and enabling devices, application hosting (App Store) and the payments subsystem – Facebook has its strength in the construction of the broadest social graph which means mapping over 450 million users The big question is: in the future will we live in a network made up of many suppliers integrated horizontally through open standards or just one large player that will be able to offer a vertically integrated service capable of satisfying user needs better than others?