<data:blog.pageTitle/> Psicologica-Mente Blog
A Facebook Data Spill? Data and Privacy

Gerd Leonhard, CEO of The Futures Agency, discusses the business, politics, and ramifications of big data and privacy. Leonard argues that there is a trade-off to free social media services.

Google and Twitter can’t police web content, says attorney general

Google and Twitter cannot “act like a policeman” of content on their networks, the attorney general has said in his strongest intervention yet on regulation of the internet.

Dominic Grieve described as an “common sense” a suggestion by the MPs and peers that privacy injunctions should routinely be served on internet companies, as well as newspapers and broadcasters.

Read more: Google and Twitter can’t police web content, says attorney general

Google+: There’s more to explore

Google+ gives you new ways to share the right things with the right people. Take a tour of our latest improvements. http://google.com/+/learnmore

How the World Spends its Time Online

internet, social media, infographic

onaissues:

How to Use Google Search More Effectively [INFOGRAPHIC]
Mashable has a super handy infographic full of tips and shortcuts to help you get better results when searching Google. 

onaissues:

How to Use Google Search More Effectively [INFOGRAPHIC]


Mashable has a super handy infographic full of tips and shortcuts to help you get better results when searching Google. 

pewinternet:

Among search engine users, Google dominance continues and it is far and away the search engine they report using most often.  Fully 83% of searchers use Google more often than any other search engine.  Yahoo is a very distant second at just 6%.  In 2004, the gap between these two search leaders was much narrower.  At that time, 47% said that Google was the search engine they used most often while 26% named Yahoo. 

pewinternet:

Among search engine users, Google dominance continues and it is far and away the search engine they report using most often.  Fully 83% of searchers use Google more often than any other search engine.  Yahoo is a very distant second at just 6%.  In 2004, the gap between these two search leaders was much narrower.  At that time, 47% said that Google was the search engine they used most often while 26% named Yahoo. 

Google under fire on privacy; British video game industry bids for tax break; PlayStation Vita reviewed.