975 resultados para Profil Facebook
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Qu’est-ce qu’une identité virtuelle? Quel est le rapport entre l’usager et son « profil » - par exemple son profil Facebook? Et encore, qu’est-ce que l’espace du web et quel est son rapport avec l’espace où nous vivons? Utilisant la notion foucauldienne d’hétérotopie, cet article cherche à ouvrir des pistes de recherches pour mieux comprendre les enjeux des identités numériques.
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Prenant le parti d’étudier la culture numérique émergente selon des rapports de continuité plutôt que de rupture, cet article envisage la question de l’auctorialité féminine sur le web au regard du mythe antique de Dibutade. Il semble en effet que Dibutade, en sa qualité de figure fondatrice de nombreuses pratiques artistiques, nous permet de porter un éclairage tout à fait intéressant sur la façon dont certaines bloggeuses affirment leur statut de femme auteur, jouant rôle majeur et moteur dans l’émergence et la reconnaissance d’une littérature numérique (conçue en ligne, publiée en ligne). Les analyses conduites dans cet article entendent souligner le potentiel esthétique de certaines pratiques d’écriture en ligne souvent ignorées par les études littéraires : les profils Facebook, les blogues érotiques voire pornographiques.
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Article publié dans le journal « Journal of Information Security Research ». March 2012.
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Les réseaux sociaux accueillent chaque jour des millions d’utilisateurs. Les usagers de ces réseaux, qu’ils soient des particuliers ou des entreprises, sont directement affectés par leur fulgurante expansion. Certains ont même développé une certaine dépendance à l’usage des réseaux sociaux allant même jusqu’à transformer leurs habitudes de vie de tous les jours. Cependant, cet engouement pour les réseaux sociaux n’est pas sans danger. Il va de soi que leur expansion favorise et sert également l’expansion des attaques en ligne. Les réseaux sociaux constituent une opportunité idéale pour les délinquants et les fraudeurs de porter préjudice aux usagers. Ils ont accès à des millions de victimes potentielles. Les menaces qui proviennent des amis et auxquelles font face les utilisateurs de réseaux sociaux sont nombreuses. On peut citer, à titre d’exemple, la cyberintimidation, les fraudes, le harcèlement criminel, la menace, l’incitation au suicide, la diffusion de contenu compromettant, la promotion de la haine, l’atteinte morale et physique, etc. Il y a aussi un « ami très proche » qui peut être très menaçant sur les réseaux sociaux : soi-même. Lorsqu’un utilisateur divulgue trop d’informations sur lui-même, il contribue sans le vouloir à attirer vers lui les arnaqueurs qui sont à la recherche continue d’une proie. On présente dans cette thèse une nouvelle approche pour protéger les utilisateurs de Facebook. On a créé une plateforme basée sur deux systèmes : Protect_U et Protect_UFF. Le premier système permet de protéger les utilisateurs d’eux-mêmes en analysant le contenu de leurs profils et en leur proposant un ensemble de recommandations dans le but de leur faire réduire la publication d’informations privées. Le second système vise à protéger les utilisateurs de leurs « amis » dont les profils présentent des symptômes alarmants (psychopathes, fraudeurs, criminels, etc.) en tenant compte essentiellement de trois paramètres principaux : le narcissisme, le manque d’émotions et le comportement agressif.
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Research on social networking sites like Facebook is emerging but sparse. The exploratory study investigates the value users derive from self-described ‘cool’ Facebook applications, and explores the features that either encourage or discourage users to recommend application to their friends. Thus the concepts of value and cool are explored in a social networking setting. Our qualitative data shows that consumers derive a combination of functional value along with either social or emotional value from the applications. Female Facebook users indicated self-expression as important, while mates then to use Facebook application to socially compete. Three broad categories emerged for application features; symmetrical features can both encourage or discourage recommendation, asymmetrical features one encourage or discourage but not both, and polar features where different levels of the same feature encourage or discourage. Recommending or not recommending an application tends to be the result of a combination of features rather than one feature in isolation.
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This paper reports on students’ perceptions, experiences and beliefs about the voluntary use of Facebook in Advertising, Law, Nursing and Creative Industries’ subjects at an Australian University. The researchers conducted in-depth interviews with students and the transcriptions were analysed using the constant comparison method. This resulted in a number of emergent themes, of which six are explored in this paper. The findings suggest that students are quite divergent in their responses to academics using Facebook in their subjects. They do not always see its relevance to the subject and are somewhat ambivalent about how it facilitates peer-to-peer relationships or a better relationship with the lecturer. The study also identifies themes relating to cynicism and intrusion into social spaces.
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The study evaluated two student online contemporary learning environments; Second Life and Facebook, student learning experiences and student knowledge outcomes. A case study methodology was used to gain rich exploratory knowledge of student learning when integrating online social networks (OSN) and virtual worlds (VW) platforms. Findings indicated students must perceive relevance in the activities when using such platforms, even though online environments create an interesting learning space for students and educators, the novelty can diminish quickly and these online environments dilute traditional authority boundaries.
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Recently I asked a first year student how he was coping with the transition from high school to university. The young fellow looked at me and said, “Man, everything is so different!” I smiled and said “like what?” with which he seriously replied, “Well for one thing, no one tells you that you have to wear a hat at lunch time.” I have to admit I was a little amused and surprised by this student’s response, as so often the focus, is placed on getting first year students to engage academically, when it is obvious at times, that even the mere transition in to university life and the culture itself, can be a hurdle. While teaching, within a large first year unit for over 10 years, it has become apparent that students want more connection with not only the peers that they study with, but also with the University as a whole. Dr Krause pointed out in her keynote paper, On Being Strategic about the First Year (2006), that this “sense of belonging is conducive to enhancing engagement, satisfaction with learning and commitment to study”. It has also become evident, that the way in which students want to be able to communicate has changed, with the advent of capabilities such as Instant Messaging via a network and Short Message Service SMS texting via their hand held mobile phones. To be able to chat and feel connected on social networking sites such as Bebo, Facebook and Twitter is not only a way of the future, it is here now and it is here to stay.
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Facebook is approaching ubiquity in the social habits and practice of many students. However, its use in higher education has been criticised (Maranto & Barton, 2010) because it can remove or blur academic boundaries. Despite these concerns, there is strong potential to use Facebook to support new students to communicate and interact with each other (Cheung, Chiu, & Lee, 2010). This paper shows how Facebook can be used by teaching staff to communicate more effectively with students. Further, it shows how it can provide a way to represent and include beginning students’ thoughts, opinions and feedback as an element of the learning design and responsive feed-forward into lectures and tutorial activities. We demonstrate how an embedded social media strategy can be used to complement and enhance the first year curriculum experience by functioning as a transition device for student support and activating Kift’s (2009) organising principles for first year curriculum design.
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Social media revolution has impacted on how people interact with one another. This has been a worldwide phenomenon. Whilst social media had its genesis in the personal and private realm its use has expanded exponentially to professional and business contexts, as well as being adopted by governments, politicians, journalists – everyone in just about every walk of life. Although at first the uptake was slow, surgeons and other health professionals are now using social media in their professional as well as personal capacity. This comes with significant advantages and opportunities for improving surgical practice and for facilitating attending communication, but it also comes with certain risks, including legal liability. This paper outlines the ways in which social media including, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and SMS, is increasingly being employed in surgical practice and explains the legal and ethical consequences that may inadvertently arise in its official, as well as, unofficial use.
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The popularity of Web 2.0 technology amongst tertiary students has become an increased talking point due to its pedagogical capabilities. The purpose of this research was to incorporate the social network Facebook within an architectural design studio to reintroduce the social interaction that was once generated within the traditional, 24 hour setting. This interaction has proven vital to an architect’s future as here they develop the initial peer network within the industry. The study draws upon existing literature to gage the effectiveness of introducing Facebook within the contemporary university environment, further, a case study was established within a second year architectural class. The correspondence was monitored at five intervals across the semester, with the information that was shared, quantified. The aim of this research was to provide the necessary foundation for the feasibility on the possible inclusion of Facebook within architectural tertiary education.
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Purpose – This paper aims to provide insights into the moral values embodied by a popular social networking site (SNS), Facebook. Design/methodology/approach – This study is based upon qualitative fieldwork, involving participant observation, conducted over a two-year period. The authors adopt the position that technology as well as humans has a moral character in order to disclose ethical concerns that are not transparent to users of the site. Findings – Much research on the ethics of information systems has focused on the way that people deploy particular technologies, and the consequences arising, with a view to making policy recommendations and ethical interventions. By focusing on technology as a moral actor with reach across and beyond the internet, the authors reveal the complex and diffuse nature of ethical responsibility and the consequent implications for governance of SNS. Research limitations/implications – The authors situate their research in a body of work known as disclosive ethics, and argue for an ongoing process of evaluating SNS to reveal their moral importance. Along with that of other authors in the genre, this work is largely descriptive, but the paper engages with prior research by Brey and Introna to highlight the scope for theory development. Practical implications – Governance measures that require the developers of social networking sites to revise their designs fail to address the diffuse nature of ethical responsibility in this case. Such technologies need to be opened up to scrutiny on a regular basis to increase public awareness of the issues and thereby disclose concerns to a wider audience. The authors suggest that there is value in studying the development and use of these technologies in their infancy, or if established, in the experiences of novice users. Furthermore, flash points in technological trajectories can prove useful sites of investigation. Originality/value – Existing research on social networking sites either fails to address ethical concerns head on or adopts a tool view of the technologies so that the focus is on the ethical behaviour of users. The authors focus upon the agency, and hence the moral character, of technology to show both the possibilities for, and limitations of, ethical interventions in such cases.
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This study analyses young gay men's identity management in social networking sites Gaydar and Facebook. It examines the expanded opportunities for identity management made available through the convergence of these spaces, as well as new privacy and safety concerns. Findings from this study are discussed in terms of their significance for gay men's digital culture, the approach to gay men's mental health taken by GLBT organisations and support groups, and within broader concerns around social networking sites and digital inequality.