social apps

The New Trend in Social Media

A new "generation" of social networking services, already quite popular, seeks to overturn the two main pillars on which social media has been based for a decade - namely the use of members' identity and the unlimited "lifetime" of their posts.

social-apps

In the form of applications for "smart" devices, a portion of these applications allow their users to communicate completely anonymously. Other services allow the exchange of content that "self-destructs" after a few minutes. Thus, they ensure that there is no chance of being exposed by a photo or comment that has "upgraded" perhaps even several years ago, and on the way he forgot to delete.

The two pillars were essentially created by Facebook, which became synonymous with social networking over the past decade. At the same time, however, it has become the most prominent example of the fact that "everything that goes on the Internet stays online forever", having negative side effects in real life, since the network forces its members to use their real name.

Although until recently these two features were non-negotiable for Mark Zuckerberg, in recent statements he left open the possibility of anonymous use in future applications of the platform. Also, Snapchat's takeover attempt, a photo social network where images are automatically deleted, shows that Facebook sees that the growing personal exposure to social media (the so-called oversharing) is not ultimately a rogue rule.

According to Tarun Wadhwa from Forbes magazine, the change in navigation is due to the increasing appeal of applications of "self-destructive" messages. Snapchat, of course, is mainly used by adolescents for sexting, that is, for the exchange of sexy photos that has become a dangerous fashion, since it is not absolutely certain that images will be lost irreversibly. However, the author adds, the logic of automatically deleted content exchange has begun to win older people, or even businesses, as a measure to protect their privacy.

Besides, applications like Textsecure, Wickr, Confide, Gryphn and Telegram Messenger make sure that the to be transmitted encrypted so that only the sender and receiver can access it. In fact, encryption and the ability to choose when messages are deleted appear to be the reasons why on February 24, within 24 hours, Telegram Messenger gained 4,95 million new users – many of whom came from the WhatsApp service which had just been acquired by Facebook.

The same functions are offered by Wickr, which in early January announced that it would offer $100.000 to any hacker who finds a "backdoor" in its software. Wickr can also process text files, or video, unlike Confide, which specializes in text messages, as it is aimed at business executives who want their communication to leave no "digital footprint". Gryphn, which is only available for Android devices, is also primarily intended for enterprise use.

On the other hand, applications such as Whisper or Secret promise a return to anonymity, which was the norm before the advent of Facebook and, according to Wired magazine, will be one of the dominant trends in social media in 2014. Their creators admit that the brand imposed by Facebook made social networking more και τα μέλη του υπόλογα για ό,τι αναρτούν online. Με αντίτιμο ωστόσο την αυτολογοκρισία και την έλλειψη αυθεντικότητας, επισημαίνουν, αφού κάθε he crafts his "digital self" as he would like it to be rather than as he really is.

So, Whisper works like an online community where anyone can anonymously think of any thought, having attracted millions of users in their lifetime, who each month see over 3 billions of pages. The Secret was released a month ago and, unlike the Whisper, allows iPhone and Android device owners to share "secrets" only with their phone book contacts, but they are hiding their identity.

Worry

The growing concern about protecting privacy is not limited to social networking, but in fact concerns all uses of the Internet: according to a recent Ericcson survey in a fairly heterogeneous set of countries (USA, Mexico, Sweden, Egypt, Pakistan and Thailand ), 56% of people who "surf" every day express reservations about the "luck" of their personal data. Data that, in addition to the Internet services to which they are assigned using them, is also targeted at secret services.

At the same time, however, only 4% of survey participants said that for this reason they have decided to use the Internet less, with 93% favoring more careful online behavior and technologies that reduce risk as a solution . A percentage that explains why services that emphasize privacy protection have been gaining ground recently. An illustrative case is the "search engine" DuckDuckGo, which does not record user activity and has seen its traffic double in recent months, reaching 4,4 billion daily searches at the beginning of January, a record number for its history.

Terrain also earns online tools that allow anonymous surfing (like Tor software or virtual private networks). In fact, in June, the first smartphone developed for the first time will be released. Being called Blackphone, the Cilent Circle phone will incorporate a varied version of Android and the encryption services it has developed.

Source: kathimerini.gr

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Written by Dimitris

Dimitris hates on Mondays .....

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