TwitsMag Canada

Article Source: CBC News

The proportion of U.S. teen and young adult internet users who blog regularly has plummeted to about 14 per cent from 28 per cent in 2006, according to a survey by the Washington-based Pew Research Centre.

The study also found that just eight per cent of teens age 12 to 17 who use the internet report using Twitter, an indication that young people are not always the early adopters of new technology.

“The decline in blogging was really surprising for us until we stepped back and thought about some of the changes that were happening in social networking,” said Amanda Lenhart, the author of the report and a senior research specialist at Pew.

The study found that in 2006, 28 per cent of internet users age 12 to 29 said they blogged regularly, but by autumn 2009, those numbers had dropped to 14 per cent of teens and 15 per cent of young adults.

During that same period, the percentage of internet users older than 30 who blog rose to 11 per cent from seven per cent.

The Pew study is the third to come out as part of the centre’s Internet and American Life Project. A total of 800 teens and 2,253 adults were interviewed over the phone for the project.

Lenhart attributed the change in online behavior to several things but chiefly to the fact social networking sites are changing and that young people are migrating to Facebook from MySpace.

“While MySpace offers this very front-and-centre opportunity to blog — it’s right there on the front of the profile — Facebook doesn’t have that,” said Lenhart. “Facebook prioritizes shorter updates, status updates, short posts.”

Another reason for the decline of blogging is that younger people are being more cautious with their online personas, which might also explain why they don’t tweet as often as older internet users, she said.

“Teens in the U.S. have been told that putting your personal information out there publicly is a very bad idea — that it’s not safe, that people will come and harm you and your reputation,” said Lenhart. “And I think because Twitter is so often used in a public way, teens, given all those cautions, don’t see the utility of it.”

Teens who do use Twitter tend to use it more as a way to get information about other people.

“They say they use it to follow celebrities or stay in touch with people they want to follow, but it’s not so much a conversation for them,” Lenhart said.

The survey has an overall accuracy of plus or minus 3.8 per cent 95 per cent of the time. For the adult findings, the accuracy is plus or minus two per cent, 95 per cent of the time.

Twitter has explained in greater detail the reason behind its decision to reset the passwords for some of its users on Tuesday after an external phishing attack. It turns out the problem, which Twitter first described as a “combination of multiple bad acts,” was part of a scam that may have exposed Twitter users who also visit torrent sites requiring login credentials. The incident also highlights, once again, that developing good password management habits is a crucial part of keeping your online identity secure.

Torrent Sites Open For Phishing Season

In a recent post on the Twitter Status blog, the company pointed to an unnamed Website designer as the main culprit behind the recent phishing expedition. For a number of years this designer had been creating Website templates for torrent sites and forums that require new users to create a login ID and password. The designer would then sell these Website templates to third parties who wanted to start their own torrent site of forum.

So the third-parties would set up their torrent sites, cataloging the latest music, film and software downloads, and people would begin signing up to use the service. But unknown to the site administrator, the unnamed designer had created a backdoor into the site allowing the designer to scoop up all the login credentials for the torrent site’s members.

After that, the designer took the login credentials and ran them against third-party sites like Twitter. Since many people use the same login information for multiple Websites and services, the site designer soon had access to a number of Twitter accounts. Even worse, the site designer left some gaping security holes in the design that allowed other hackers to exploit the sites.

One such exploit would prevent users from logging in to the torrent site, and then redirected the user to a different site where they were asked for their login credentials again. This way the hackers could collect login credentials and try to gain access to a user’s Twitter accounts using the same methods as the site designer.

Twitter has not said which torrent sites were victims of this scam, but the microblog is advising all users who are also members of any torrent site to reset their passwords. Twitter said there was a “high correlation between folks who have used third party forums and download sites and folks who were on our list of possibly affected accounts.” However, Twitter also said not all users who were sent password reset notifications were victims of the torrent scam.

Password Safety

This latest Twitter attack highlights, yet again, why practicing good password habits is so crucial. You likely know the password basics like avoiding common passwords such as ‘123456,’ or ‘password,’ which reportedly led to the RockYou data breach last month. You should also make sure you use a combination of letters and numbers, and the more random these combinations are the better. Your password should also be at least eight characters in length, and make sure they do not include things like a common word, name or part of your e-mail address.

But the problem with the Twitter hack wasn’t so much about password strength as password management. If you’re using one, two, or even three common passwords across all your services then you may be vulnerable to a similar attack. One of the best ways to defend against this is to use a password management program.

If you want something a little more low tech you could also consider writing down all your passwords on a separate piece of paper and keeping it somewhere safe (hint: not underneath your keyboard). A less secure, but more practical, option is to create a text file or spreadsheet listing all your passwords. But if you plan to go this route just make sure you don’t name your file something obvious like ‘passwords,’ ’secrets’ or ‘keys to the kingdom.’

Article Source: PC World

FOLLOW FAIL: The Top 10 Reasons I Will Not Follow You in Return on Twitter

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Twitter Under Phishing Attack?

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Article Source: THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO – The Ontario Provincial Police force is the latest police agency to join the social media movement by opening a Twitter account.

Police forces in several Canadian cities, including Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver, along with the RCMP, have Twitter accounts. The Ontario force says its account (at www.twitter.com/OPP-News) will include news releases and other messages.

Some Canadian police forces have already used social network sites to help catch suspects.

Many have used YouTube to show crime scene surveillance tapes or to broadcast appeals to suspects to turn themselves in.

Last summer, Toronto police reportedly used Twitter to monitor chatter from Tamil protesters who shut down a major highway.

A U.S. social media consultant visited Canada last year to teach police how to make better use of social networking sites to fight crime, including setting up fake accounts on Facebook and Twitter to track sexual predators and gang members.

Lauri Stevens told the CBC during her visit that police “make connections that way (and) get inside that world, and go from there.”

Article : The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Little or no grammar teaching, cellphone texting, social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, all are being blamed for an increasingly unacceptable number of post-secondary students who can’t write properly.

For years there’s been a flood of anecdotal complaints from professors about what they say is the wretched state of English grammar coming from some of their students.

Now there seems to be some solid evidence.

Ontario’s Waterloo University is one of the few post-secondary institutions in Canada to require the students they accept to pass an exam testing their English language skills.

Almost a third of those students are failing.

“Thirty per cent of students who are admitted are not able to pass at a minimum level,” says Ann Barrett, managing director of the English language proficiency exam at Waterloo University.

“We would certainly like it to be a lot lower.”

Barrett says the failure rate has jumped five percentage points in the past few years, up to 30 per cent from 25 per cent.

“What has happened in high school that they cannot pass our simple test of written English, at a minimum?” she asks.

Even those with good marks out of Grade 12, so-called elite students, “still can’t pass our simple test,” she says.

Poor grammar is the major reason students fail, says Barrett.

“If a student has problems with articles, prepositions, verb tenses, that’s a problem.”

Some students in public schools are no longer being taught grammar, she believes.

“Are they (really) preparing students for university studies?”

At Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, one in 10 new students are not qualified to take the mandatory writing courses required for graduation.

That 10 per cent must take so-called “foundational” writing courses first.

Simon Fraser is reviewing its entrance requirements for English language.

“There has been this general sense in the last two or three years that we are finding more students are struggling in terms of language proficiency,” says Rummana Khan Hemani, the university’s director of academic advising.

Emoticons, happy faces, sad faces, cuz, are just some of the writing horrors being handed in, say professors and administrators at Simon Fraser.

“Little happy faces … or a sad face … little abbreviations,” show up even in letters of academic appeal, says Khan Hemani.

“Instead of ‘because’, it’s ‘cuz’. That’s one I see fairly frequently,” she says, and these are new in the past five years.

Khan Hemani sends appeal submissions with emoticons in them back to students to be re-written “because a committee will immediately get their backs up when they see that kind of written style.”

Professors are seeing their share of bad grammar in essays as well.

“The words ‘a lot’ have become one word, for everyone, as far as I can tell. ‘Definitely’ is always spelled with an ‘a’ -’definitely’. I don’t know why,” says Paul Budra, an English professor and associate dean of arts and science at Simon Fraser.

“Punctuation errors are huge, and apostrophe errors. Students seem to have absolutely no idea what an apostrophe is for. None. Absolutely none.”

He is floored by some of what he sees.

“I get their essays and I go ‘You obviously don’t know what a sentence fragment is. You think commas are sort of like parmesan cheese that you sprinkle on your words’,” said Budra.

Then he’s reduced to teaching basic grammar to them himself.

He says this has been going on now for the 20 years he’s taught college and university in B.C. and Ontario-only the mistakes have changed.

He too blames poor – or no – grammar instruction in lower schools.

“When I went to high school in the ’70s I was never taught grammar in English. I learned grammar from Latin classes.”

Budra was taught to read and write using whole language rather than phonetics – not a good way to go in his books.

“We haven’t taught grammar for 30-40 years…(and it) hasn’t worked.”

“It’s not that hard to teach basic grammar,” he says.

Ontario’s Ministry of Education says grammar is a part of both its elementary and high school curriculum.

Cellphone texting and social networking on Internet sites are degrading writing skills, say even experts in the field.

“I think it has,” says Joel Postman, author of “SocialCorp: Social Media Goes Corporate,” who has taught Fortune 500 companies how to use social networking.

The Internet norm of ignoring punctuation and capitalization as well as using emoticons may be acceptable in an email to friends and family, but it can have a deadly effect on one’s career if used at work.

“It would say to me … ‘well, this person doesn’t think very clearly, and they’re not very good at analyzing complex subjects, and they’re not very good at expressing themselves, or at worse, they can’t spell, they can’t punctuate,’ ” he says.

“These folks are going to short-change themselves, and right or wrong, they’re looked down upon in traditional corporations,” notes Postman.

But “spelling is getting better because of Spellcheck,” says Margaret Proctor, University of Toronto writing support co-ordinator.

James Turk of the Association of University Teachers takes all the complaints about student literacy with a grain of salt.

“There’s a notion of a golden age in the past that students were wonderful, unlike now. I’m not sure that golden age ever existed,” he says.

“You can go back and read Plato and see Socrates talking about the allegations that this generation isn’t as not as good as previous ones,” he notes.

Article Source: Eonline

Tila Tequila

MySpace was good—too good, in hindsight—to Tila Tequila. Twitter wasn’t. So earlier this morning, she quit.

Now how are we supposed to know when Tila’s claiming to be pregnant, calling out potential baby daddies, posting her cell phone number, adopting Haitian babies, announcing that she’s put herself on suicide watch, mourning the loss of her fiancée or otherwise exploiting her caps lock button?

“Fans are saying #TilaDontLeave I’m sorry but I have to go my loves,” read her last series of tweets. “A baby is on the way…..Deleting my page in 3, 2……..

“Andddddd 1……..#TilaDontLeave but I’m out! Had lots of fun with you all and Love you, miss you but maybe I’ll sign up again 1 day..bye”

True to her word (for maybe the first time ever), Tequila’s Twitter account has been shut down.

“I love you all and will miss you here on Twitter! We have had our fun times together, but my Time on Twitter has run it’s course! Deleting.”

Deleting, but in her own sweet time, as nine more tweets were posted before her final good-bye.

“GOODBYE TWITTER!!! I WILL MISS YOU ALL! ACTUALLY AFTER THIS TWEET I WILL GIVE YOU 15 MORE MINUTES THEN I WILL DELETE MY PAGE NOW!”

Still, should anyone out there be curious as to the goings-on in Tila’s life, she’s left her forwarding information—her official blog, Tila’s Hot Spot, on which she’s already posted two journal messages today.

And in case anyone wanted the inside track as to why Tequila shut down her Twitter account, here it is: “Cuz Piggy face Perez is on there and he’s so fat and ugly and I just felt disgusted being on the same community with him.”

The pot then referred to the kettle as a “waste of space” and announced plans to launch her own celebrity gossip blog—TilaTequilaOMG.com—in about three weeks’ time.

Apparently, there’s about to be a gap in the market.

“PIGGY PEREZ IS SO JEALOUS OF ME!…HE KNOWS THAT MY BLOG WILL BLOW HIS S—TY BLOG OUT OF THE WATER!!!

Last we checked, Perez was still publishing. And the Twitterverse was humming along without a certain someone.

Article Source: Computerworld

People logging on to their Twitter accounts this morning found a new feature waiting for them.

The micro-blogging site had disclosed last night that the new Local Trends feature would be added to the site today. It’s designed to keep Twitter users up to date with the hottest topics being Twittered in a specific geographic location.

Pick Your Location On Twitter

Pick Your Location On Twitter

“Local Trends will allow you to learn more about the nuances in our world and discover even more relevant topics that might matter to you,” wrote Twitter’s Jenna Dawn on the company’s blog site. “The big events that come up around the world will always become a global conversation, but what about the big events that only happen in your world that only matter to those around you? Or the slight differences in the way Californians perceive an event, like Obama’s election victory, versus those Sao Paulo, Brazil?”

Right now, there aren’t many locations — users initially have only 13 cities and six countries around the world to choose from.

Twitter may need such new to keep its users engaged on the site. RJMetrics, Inc. yesterday released a study showing that the number of Twitter users has climbed to a lofty 75 million, but that the growth rate of new users is slowing. The study also found that a lot of current Twitterers are inactive.

According to the findings, only 17% of all Twitter accounts Twittered last month. That’s down from more than 70% in early 2007 when Twitter was a fledgling company with far, far fewer users.

The report said that Twitter has between 10 million and 15 million active tweeters.

Article Source: direct traffic media

Social networking sites are continuing to absorb more of people’s time online as Facebook and Twitter grow in online dominance.Global analysis conducted by Nielsen Online found that consumers spend over five and a half hours on social networking sites per month on average. The results from December 2009 showed a dramatic increase of the amount of time spent using social sites from previous years.

In the last two years the average amount of time spent on sites like Facebook has more than doubled, with the average user spending just two hours and ten minutes a month on social networks in December 2007. By December 2008 that had risen to just over three hours a month, but the 2009 figures show an impressive 82 per cent increase since the previous year.

The take-up of social media users is growing as more people join the online phenomenon, but importantly, networks like Facebook are retaining their populations and encouraging people to spend significant amounts of time online each month. Two thirds of global social media users visited Facebook at least once a month, with the average user spending six hours a month on the site.

From an online advertising perspective, harnessing the marketing power of captive audiences on social networks is a smart move for those companies experiencing high traffic volumes. In the US the total minutes spent on social sites increased by 210 per cent year on year.

Twitter continued to be the fastest growing social site online with a 579 per cent growth in the US alone, one of Twitter’s most prolific markets.

Article Source: ZD Net UK

Twitter has temporarily disabled a feature based on Adobe Flash, after a security researcher demonstrated the feature could be used to hijack user accounts.

“We’ve been notified about a vulnerability in our Flash widget and out of an abundance of caution we’ve disabled access as we assess the situation,” Twitter said on Friday in an update on its status page.

The company said it was not aware of any attacks that had been carried out using the vulnerability.

Mike Bailey, a senior security analyst with Foreground Security, demonstrated the flaw on a dummy Twitter account on Friday. Bailey used an XML file hosted on his server to exploit the weakness and cause the dummy Twitter account to display: “@mckt_ just pwned my Twitter account. Neat.”

The exploit required that a user click on a link while logged in to Twitter, according to Foreground. As a result, Bailey was able to steal the user’s session credentials, giving him full access to the account.

The problem is with a Flash-based widget used to display Twitter updates on websites, according to Bailey.

Twitter said the problem does not affect the JavaScript version of the widget. “Please note that the JavaScript widgets are unaffected and are a good alternative for those of you who had been using the Flash version,” the company stated.

Bailey demonstrated the Twitter bug ahead of a talk called ‘Neat, New and Ridiculous Flash Hacks’ that he is scheduled to give at next month’s Black Hat security conference in Washington DC.

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