Tulsa shooting suspects confessed

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Facebook News


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Editor’s note: This story contains offensive language.

(CNN) — The 19-year-old Tulsa, Oklahoma, man whose Facebook page lamented his father’s death “at the hands of a f–king n—-r” told investigators he shot three of the African-Americans injured or killed in a Friday shooting spree, according to police documents.

Fellow suspect Alvin Watts confessed to shooting the other two people, according to the documents, which include only summaries of the reported confessions and few details.

Based on his statement, police believe Watts pulled the trigger in two of the three fatal shootings, according to the documents.

A police spokesman declined to comment Tuesday when asked about the reported confessions.

Authorities accuse the pair of gunning down apparent strangers at four different locations in a largely African-American section of Tulsa early Friday.


Tulsa killing spree an act of revenge?


Tips aided in Tulsa arrests


2 arrested in Tulsa shooting spree


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Click to enlarge mapClick to enlarge map

Authorities identified the victims as Dannaer Fields, William Allen and Bobby Clark. The other two shooting victims survived.

Police arrested Watts, 19, and Jake England, 33, early Sunday after tips led investigators to England’s burned pickup. The vehicle matched one reported at the crime scenes, according to the arrest reports.

A judge ordered England and Watts held Monday on $9.16 million bond each pending formal charges on allegations of murder, shooting with intent to kill and gun possession.

Police reports characterize both men as white, but authorities have declined to say whether they think race played a role in the shootings.

An update posted to England’s Facebook page the day before the shootings noted it was the second anniversary of his father’s death “at the hands of a f–king n—-r.” The entry also mentioned his girlfriend’s recent suicide.

Prosecutors will review whether hate crime charges are appropriate against England and Watts, Tulsa County District Attorney Tim Harris said Monday.

“If the motivation is racial in this case, then that needs to be vetted in a court of law just like any others,” Harris said. “It’s the law of the state of Oklahoma, and if the facts and the evidence support that, then we’re going to go forward with it.”

Police Chief Chuck Jordan described England and Watts as apparently close friends who shared a home in Tulsa.

One survivor of Friday’s shootings, Deon Tucker, told reporters Monday that he was standing on his porch when a white pickup pulled up and the driver asked him for directions.

“Next thing I know, they start shooting,” he said.

“What are they shooting me for? I ain’t got no enemies. I didn’t know what was going on,” recalled Tucker, who said he was shot once in the chest.

He added that he understands that his race might have led to his shooting. But Tucker said he simply “got caught in the wrong spot” and isn’t “mad at anybody,” describing his shooter as a “lunatic.”

On Friday, a friend had warned England not to “do anything stupid” after he posted a message Friday, apparently after the shootings, that read “It just mite be the time to call it quits.”

“I hate to say it like that but I’m done if something does happen tonite be ready for another funeral later,” England wrote.

“It’s hard not to go off between that and sheran I’m gone in the head,” he wrote, referring to his girlfriend.

The Facebook page was taken down Sunday afternoon.

Watts’ brother, Michael Watts, said the shootings “broke our heart,” CNN affiliate KTUL reported.

“If that boy done this, there’s no excuse for it,” KTUL quoted Watts as saying. “I just want to apologize to those families. My heart goes out to them.”

A man who identified himself as England’s uncle — speaking Monday outside the suspects’ home — said his nephew had been troubled by the recent suicide of his girlfriend and his father’s death in April 2010.

“His mind couldn’t take it anymore, I guess,” the man said. “I guess it just snapped his mind.”

Prosecutors declined to file homicide charges in the death of England’s father, ruling it a justifiable homicide, the Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office said in a statement Monday.

England and Watts remained jailed Tuesday pending an April 16 arraignment. Meanwhile, prosecutors prepared formal charges against the pair.

While Harris declined to say Monday if hate crime charges would be included, City Councilor Jack Henderson said the online posts and the circumstances of the shootings lead him to believe that the shooters targeted their victims chiefly because of race.

“You have an individual — a white male — going into a predominantly black community (to) shoot at black people. And with the other evidence … and some of the things that were said, that leads me to believe that this was totally a hate crime,” Henderson said.

Tulsa was the scene of a 1921 race riot — considered one of the worst in the nation — that destroyed the famed Greenwood District, a wealthy black enclave known as the black Wall Street.

Harris said the community’s response to the shootings said more about current race relations in Tulsa than the shootings should.

“This community will not be defined by the treacherous, evil crimes of two individuals,” he said. “That’s not what Tulsa, Oklahoma, is about, and that’s not what our people are about,” he said. “The fact that this community drew together as one to stop this threat is what Tulsa is all about.”

CNN’s Maria P. White and Jason Carroll contributed to this report.






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Article source: http://www.cnn.com/2012/04/10/us/oklahoma-shootings/?hpt=hp_bn1

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WA Man with ‘Fugitive’ Status Keeps Updating Facebook

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Facebook News


Tue Apr 10, 2012 5:23am EDT

Facebook sure can be addicting, even for guys on the go. And even, it seems, if you’re running from the cops like Travis A. Nicolaysen of Port Angeles, Wash.

Nicolaysen, 26 — who lists his job title as “Boss” at “da game,” according to his Facebook profile — remains a fugitive after officers and a police dog chased him on foot, the local Peninsula Daily News reports. But the wanted man was apparently still updating his Facebook page, up until a few days ago.

“Cops all over you,” one friend posted on Nicolaysen’s wall after the foot chase April 4. “[Y]a got away thanks bro,” Nicolaysen replied the day after.

What fugitive Travis Nicolaysen doesn’t say in his Facebook updates is that he’s wanted for a parole violation — he hasn’t checked-in with his parole officer since January, the Daily News reports.

Nicolaysen, a father of two according to his Facebook page, is also wanted for allegedly assaulting his girlfriend in March. Nicolaysen has prior convictions for domestic violence, burglary, and theft of a firearm.

The relationship with his girlfriend is over — or at least it appeared that way on Saturday: Nicolaysen updated his status from “in a relationship” to “single” while on the lam, the Daily News reports. (If the post still exists, it’s no longer available for public viewing.)

If Nicolaysen is caught, he’ll likely face an additional charge for evading police. If anyone helped hide him, they could face a charge of aiding and abetting, or being an accessory.

As for Port Angeles police, they don’t have the technology to track a fugitive’s movements via Facebook, the Daily News reports. But Facebook’s policy states the company “may” share a user’s information in response to a legal request. So far, there hasn’t been one.

On Facebook, one woman who identified herself as Nicolaysen’s aunt posted, “haha just goes to show how stupid and corrupt the cops in this town are !!! run travis run, i love you!!”

It seems Travis Nicolaysen has now gone silent on Facebook, after his initial fugitive status updates. Maybe he doesn’t “like” the fact that the cops are probably checking in on him as well.

Related Resources:

  • Port Angeles fugitive still updating Facebook (The Associated Press)
  • Attempt, Conspiracy and Aiding (FindLaw)
  • ‘Deleted’ Facebook Photos Still Online 3 Years Later (FindLaw’s Technologist)
  • Facebook Friend Suggestion Gets Man Charged With Bigamy (FindLaw’s Legally Weird)

Article source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/10/tagblogsfindlawcom2012-legallyweird-idUS220647354720120410

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Facebook buys Instagram, now what?

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Facebook News

(Credit:
Facebook/Instagram)

(CBS News) Facebook announced they would purchase popular photo-sharing app Instagram Monday for a mind-blowing $1 billion. Once the acquisition is complete, people are wondering what will happen to the two-year old app that took smartphones by storm.

Facebook to acquire Instagram for $1 billion
Full coverage of Facebook at Tech Talk

Speculation has already started over what the world’s largest social network will do with Instagram. Skeptical users took to Twitter to decry the deal, even threatening to delete the app.

Naysayers have legitimate reasons for concern. Instagram is the most popular product that Facebook has purchased. Soon after Facebook purchased the location-based social network Gowalla in December 2011, the company closed up shop in March 2012. Facebook also purchased the up-and-coming FriendFeed in August 2009, but the social aggregation site has stalled since.

Let’s not jump ahead of ourselves, however. Gowalla was already losing ground to more popular services like Foursquare and Facebook Places. As for FriendFeed, the market for social aggregation didn’t quite evolve the way many thought it would.

Instagram for Android gets 1 million downloads in first day
Instagram launches for Android smartphones

A corporate takeover does not exactly spell doom for Instagram. This could be a great thing for both services.

Ideally, what Facebook will do is leave Instagram’s simple user interface alone – meaning, no advertisements or redesign. Instead, the social network should port the features like filters and sharing over to Facebook mobile upload.

Facebook chief executive officer Mark Zuckerberg emphasized that they would not change Instagram in a significant way.

“We’re committed to building and growing Instagram independently,” Zuckerberg said on his Facebook feed Monday.

Another feature that would shine is better Instagram integration with Timeline. Currently, you can’t highlight an Instagram photo so that it spans two columns in Timeline. If we’re lucky, Facebook will push for a photo size that can be featured on Timeline.

While there are websites that aggregate Instagram photos, there is no official website for users to visit and manage photos. It wouldn’t be a surprise if a stronger web presence gets put in the queue.




Article source: http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501465_162-57411805-501465/facebook-buys-instagram-now-what/

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Miley Cyrus turns to fake Will Smith after explaining gluten allergy on Twitter

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Twitter News


Will Smith.
(Kevin Winter – GETTY IMAGES)
Miley Cyrus was forced to take to Twitter yesterday to explain that she’s not anorexic, just gluten intolerant.

The Internet concern stemmed from a tweet showing the actress with a bag of fast food with the message, “I can’t eat it. So I’m just gonna smell the [expletive] out of it! My mouth is LITERALLY watering.”

Cyrus then explained she has a gluten allergy that prevents her from consuming foods like that, not an eating disorder.

In the midst of intense media speculation about her weight, Cyrus retweeted some fitting words from the Twitter account, @WilISmith.

“Skinny = anorexic , thick = obese , virgin = too good , non-virgin = [expletive], friendly = fake , quiet = rude. You can never please society,” the tweet reads.

Like other celebrities before her, Cyrus turned to this Will Smith Twitter account for wise words and inspiration. What she may or may not realize is that the account is a parody.

Just from glancing at the account, which has over 1 million followers, it’s hard to tell that it’s not real. There’s a picture of the “Men in Black” actor and the user name doesn’t specify that it is a fake.

However, the account’s description states it is a parody and is “not in anyway affiliated with the actor Will Smith.” There’s a link to the Oscar nominee’s verified Facebook account, his only social media presence.

The tweets — written by a man from Nashville, according to the Hollywood Reporter — have been retweeted by Rihanna, Tia Mowry, Kelly Clarkson and Jenna Jameson. Former “Cheetah Girl” Adrienne Bailon has taken a particular liking to the tweets.

Fake Smith usually offers up general advice like “Life is too short to worry about what others say or think about you. Have fun and give them something to talk about” and “Don’t give someone all of your time if they’re only gonna give you half of theirs,” as well as the occasional real talk tweet. (“Dear guys who say condoms are uncomfortable, I’ve heard giving birth is pretty uncomfortable too . . . Sincerely, put it on.”)

But last month, the account came under scrutiny when it sent out a message about the killing of Trayvon Martin.

“WE live in America where a girl that threw flour on Kim Kardashian was arrested on site. But the man who KILLED Trayvon Martin is still free,” the tweet said, referencing the flour-bombing of reality star Kim Kardashian and the killing of a Florida teen.

The message was retweeted by Spike Lee, Rosie O’Donnell and Omarosa (of “The Apprentice” fame) and falsely attributed to the real actor.

(A fake Will Ferrell account tweeted a similar message and was cited by a CNN anchor as proof that the actor supported Martin’s family.)

At the time, the account had the handle @ReaiWiiiSmith. But, as Buzzfeed pointed out, the serif-lacking font on Twitter made the name appear as @RealWillSmith.

The “Real” has since been dropped from the handle name. But again, because of the font, the handle appears as @Will_Smith.

Twitter has a policy that clearly states rules for parody accounts, asking that a word like “fake” or “fan” be placed in the user name, name and bio.

We have reached out to Smith’s publicist to see whether the actor is aware of parody account and its ability to inspire celebrities. We’ve also contacted the person behind the fake Smith account to explain why exactly he’s running a parody account. Updates will be added if we hear back.

In the meantime, keep on being inspired by the words of the fake Will Smith, celebrities of the world.

Article source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/celebritology/post/miley-cyrus-turns-to-fake-will-smith-after-explaining-gluten-allergy-on-twitter/2012/04/10/gIQA21AW8S_blog.html

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Google more popular than Apple, Facebook, Twitter

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Twitter News

To GOOGLE is a verb.

“Appling”, “Facebooking”?

Tweeting is what birds do, pick away (from wisdom and principle), one small-talk worm at a time.

Google is simultaneously employing complex technology with biz skill Philosophy (Philo Sophia – Son of Wisdom), increasingly AVOIDING mere small-talk, thus establishing itself as THE GO-TO for the upcoming 4th-Layer-of-Wisdom (lit. white field; error-free realm) operators, who tend to think from above.

Article source: http://www.zdnet.com/blog/facebook/google-more-popular-than-apple-facebook-twitter/11598

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Alec Baldwin lashes out at alleged stalker — on Twitter

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Twitter News

Alec Baldwin took to Twitter Tuesday to hit back at the French Canadian actress who allegedly harassed and sent flurries of lusty emails to the newly engaged “30 Rock” star.

“Isn’t it odd when an accused stalker is in handcuffs, being taken away by the cops, yet smiles for the cameras?” Baldwin wrote to his 813,000 followers.

Aspiring actress Genevieve Sabourin was arraigned in Manhattan Criminal Court Monday night on charges of aggravated harassment and stalking.

The 40-year-old woman claims she had a two-year relationship with Baldwin and showed up outside his E.10th St. building multiple times in the days after his engagement to yoga instructor Hilaria Thomas became public.

Sabourin was arrested outside the actor’s digs Sunday night and is accused of calling and emailing him repeatedly, even asking him to be her husband and father her child.

“I need you now, please Alec come and pick me up now,” Sabourin wrote in one email. “I am less than 10 min away from you tonight.”

Baldwin denies the relationship, claiming he dined with the wannabe in 2011 only as a “favor to a friend.”

Sabourin was released without bail Monday but ordered to keep her distance from Baldwin and his fiancee.

In a further snub to their alleged stalker, the love birds also used Twitter to profess their devotion to one another.

“I am lucky and grateful in my life now, no matter what the motivations of certain others,” Baldwin wrote to his bride-to-be.

“Its a 2way st, amor,” Thomas replied an hour after telling one of her followers: “This woman has taken up enough of our time energy. Now we have to trust the judicial system that they will protect us.”

cboyle@nydailynews.com

Article source: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/alec-baldwin-lashes-alleged-stalker-twitter-article-1.1059165?localLinksEnabled=false

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Facebook chats helped lead to arrest of suspect in brutal Union Township murder – The Star-Ledger

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Facebook News

Union Township murder suspect arrested

A few weeks ago, a woman from Massachusetts began to sense something scary about her new Facebook friend.

She’d been chatting with Arnell Yearwood, a 26-year-old New Jersey drifter, but had never met him in the “real world.” And when he sent her messages that seemed suspicious, she started searching the internet, police say.

That’s when she read about the death of Diane Zaleski, a sweet and gregarious 54-year-old woman who was killed in her Union Township home in November 2010. Zaleski’s slaying was so gruesome a medical examiner couldn’t determine how she died, just that her killer had inflicted “wounds upon wounds upon wounds” with more than one weapon.

The woman from Massachusetts put two-and-two together and phoned detectives in New Jersey. They immediately drove to New England to see her and, they now say, unraveled one of the most brutal and perplexing homicides Union County has seen in recent years.

Investigators had cleared some 100 suspects during their year-long investigation, but when they heard about the Facebook messages, they knew Yearwood “clearly was the murderer,” Prosecutor Theodore Romankow said at a news conference Monday announcing the man’s arrest. He would not elaborate.

zaleski-yearwood.jpgDiane Zaleski, left, was killed in November 2010 in Union Township. Police have arrested a suspect, Arnell Yearwood, right.

It took cops several weeks to capture Yearwood, who they say bounces from sofa to sofa and isn’t easy to pin down. But, with the help of the State Police, the county’s homicide task force tracked Yearwood to a Vauxhall Avenue house in Union Township where he was removing carpets. He was arrested Saturday as he left the home.

He is now charged with murder and is being held on $1 million bail at the Union County jail. A thin and short man with a scruffy black beard, Yearwood was led from the prosecutor’s office Monday afternoon in handcuffs and beige jail uniform. He wore a stern look as three police officers led him to a black sedan and past journalists who’d been at the news conference.

The Zaleski family reacted with relief after Yearwood’s arrest was announced. They’ve been living through hell since her death, said her niece Marisa Iannarone, who spoke at the news conference as her family crowded around her.

“Diane was such a loving, caring, generous and beautiful woman, and was depended on by so many. Today’s news has been long awaited. Although Diane is not with us, justice will finally be served. His inconceivable actions have been haunting us endlessly,” she said, wiping a tear from her eye. “Now we can turn our focus to the courts and ensure he never sees the light of day again.”

This is the second arrest the Union County Prosecutor’s Office has made in the past week involving a cold case. Both, it turns out, share a chilling trait: The alleged killers lived or stayed near the victim’s home.



Family of murder victim Diane Zaleski find justice

Family of murder victim Diane Zaleski find justice
Family of murder victim Diane Zaleski speak at a press conference with
Union County Prosecutor Theodore J. Romankow who announced a break in the case. Zalesk’s family including niece Marisa Iannarone, who made a brief statement, joined Romankow and law enforcement to announced the arrest of Arnell Yearwood, who has been charged in the murder. (Video by Jennifer Brown /The Star-Ledger)

Watch video



Last Tuesday, Romankow announced the arrest of a 51-year-old man charged with the 1976 slaying of Lena Triano, a secretary found raped, beaten, strangled and stabbed to death in her Westfield home. The prosecutor said he could not publicly name the man under the juvenile law that existed in 1976. But The Star-Ledger learned through law enforcement sources the suspect is Carlton R. Franklin, who lived directly behind Triano and was 15 at the time of her death.

In the Zaleski case, it turned out Yearwood had been staying with his mother on Laurana Road — the same short, dead-end street where the victim lived. It’s still a mystery what motive he had and whether the two had ever met, the prosecutor said.

Yearwood’s family did not reveal that he had been staying there when they spoke to police after the killing, Romankow said, adding he does not know whether it was an innocent omission or something left out intentionally. No one answered the door at the mother’s home Monday.

“If we had known a little sooner about this fellow being over at his mom’s house, it might have helped,” he said. “Fortunately, we don’t believe he did any other type of crime of this sort in between.”

The friend from Massachusetts told police Yearwood was planning to meet another Facebook friend in Chicago. The woman, who Romankow did not identify, warned the woman about what she’d found. Romankow would not reveal what information Yearwood had shared with the woman from Massachusetts, but he called it “incriminating.”

He also wouldn’t specifically say what other evidence led to the arrest, but noted the Union County Sheriff’s Office had recovered forensic evidence that was processed by the county’s crime laboratory. Those agencies played a key a role in Yearwood being charged with murder, he said.

Related coverage:

One year after brutal Union Township murder, authorities still look for suspects

Friends anxiously await answers in Union woman’s murder

Police say Union Twp. woman found dead in home was killed

Article source: http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/04/facebook_chats_helped_lead_to.html

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Wash. man on the run from police finds time to update Facebook page: ‘got away …

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Facebook News

Nicolaysen has been on the lam since two foot chases Wednesday and a dragnet that included a police dog tracking him through a Port Angeles neighborhood. The dog came up only with a blue bandanna that Nicolaysen had been wearing.

Nicolaysen has been convicted of five felonies, including domestic violence, burglary and theft of a firearm, police said. He is wanted by the Washington state Department of Corrections for failing to check in with his community corrections officer since January.

A Facebook post from another friend told him to be careful. Another urged him to surrender and set a better example for his children. “You’re not getting any younger and you’re looking at a lot of time,” the friend writes. A picture on the Facebook page shows Nicolaysen with two toddlers.

He’s also been accused of assaulting his girlfriend on March 28, police said.

Better make that his ex-girlfriend. In a post Saturday, Nicolaysen changed his relationship status to single, the Peninsula Daily News reported (http://is.gd/dpnPtm ).

Police are among those checking the page. “Absolutely,” Deputy Chief Brian Smith told The Associated Press on Monday.

“We’re used to pinging databases and sources of information,” he said. “It’s normal for us to look at Facebook accounts.”

Smith also saw the growing number of comments on Nicolaysen’s account — some of them mocking police — as he remained at large Monday.

“I don’t think it’s going to make it any easier for him,” Smith said.

A lot of people communicate openly and can remain beyond the long arm of the law, at least for a while, he said.

Facebook tells its users that it may share certain information if it gets requests from law enforcement, and that it does have some ability to track people via IP addresses and GPS location.

Serving Facebook with a search warrant is a possibility, but there are no immediate plans for that, Smith said. For now, police hope the publicity alone may be enough to flush him out in a city the size of Port Angeles, which has a population of 19,000 and is about 65 miles northwest of Seattle on the Olympic Peninsula.

“In a smaller community, it’s harder to disappear and be anonymous,” Smith said. “We’re hoping people who know him call police.”

“People are giving him advice” to surrender, Smith said, “and he might want to follow it.”

While police find the fugitive Facebook posting a little frustrating, it’s a source of glee for Teri Newell of Port Angeles who says she helped raise Nicolaysen and describes herself as his aunt.

“I think it’s hilarious,” said Newell, who confirmed the Facebook account belonged to Nicolaysen.

“That’s my boy, Travis,” she said.

“Every single time he gets out of jail, he doesn’t check in,” said Newell, who also complains that police are heavy-handed.

She said she doesn’t know where he is.

“If he’s smart, he’s hidden away, tucked away safe,” she said.

An email to Nicolaysen from The Associated Press bounced back.

Port Angeles attorney Robert Vienneau, who says he knows Nicolaysen, says the fugitive does what he has to do to get by.

“Travis comes from a rough background, but he’s got a good heart,” Vienneau said.

___

Associated Press writer Phuong Le contributed to this report.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Article source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/wash-man-on-the-run-from-police-finds-time-to-update-facebook-page-got-away-thanks-bro/2012/04/10/gIQA7enZ7S_story.html

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Is Facebook our Big Friend or Big Brother?

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Facebook News

Facebook, the funky little social media operation that began as a way for horny Harvard guys to meet girls, has turned into an Internet juggernaut. On its way to an initial public stock offering that will probably bring in $100 billion, Facebook has decided to spend one of those millions on a tiny company with a staff of just 13 people.

That tiny company is called Instagram, purveyor of a photo sharing and enhancement application for smartphones. Instagram’s app has become so popular that it has morphed into an alternative avenue for communicating with family and friends. Hardly a rival to the 845-million-user Facebook, it had still threatened to be a pest, so Facebook chose to gobble it up and make those 13 Instagram employees very, very wealthy.

Even though Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg said he intends to maintain Instagram as an independent unit run by the very same people who made it a hit, some Instagram fans are acting as if this is a tragedy. They liked the idea that there was a little corner of the online world where they could gather and be outside the reach of the Zuckerberg empire. It’s not that Zuckerberg is a bad guy, it’s just that he and his particular vision of how humanity should interact in the digital universe seems increasingly inescapable.

Facebook, Google, Apple, Microsoft and Amazon are the masters of this new universe. Each dominates an overlapping realm of activity and enterprise on the Internet – social media, search engine, hardware design, software and online commerce. And each is now so huge that they can kill or buy most competitors and set the standards for online engagement for us all.

The good news is the folks who created and run these companies are generally trying to do useful things with their power. Still, not everyone is happy that the wild frontier of cyberspace has been tamed and divided up by such a small cadre of billionaire geniuses.

For years, personal computer owners have complained about the occasional infuriating glitches in the Microsoft operating system. Even those who admire the supple brilliance of Apple products, sometimes resent the closed world of Apple technology. Many are outraged by Google’s cavalier use of other people’s creative content. And the publishing world lives in mortal fear of Amazon.

Of the five giants, Facebook has fewer detractors simply because people think of it less as a business than as a cool way to contact friends. Zuckerberg and company have generally been quick to respond to complaints when they have pushed the boundaries of privacy too quickly. And, yet, they have never stopped enticing users to give up just a little more information day after day.

Now, each person’s Facebook page is being revamped to appear on a timeline stretching back to birth and it is more tempting than ever to tell all to an ever-increasing number of friends. I found myself doing exactly that a few nights ago when I converted to the new Facebook format. It was simple to figure out and soon I had posted a baby picture of myself, a shot of me in college, a photo of my wife at the time we got married and pictures of my children as babies.

At first I could not quite imagine anyone being particularly interested in these scenes from my younger days, but I was wrong. Almost as soon as I posted the pictures, I got messages from friends “liking” what I had done. Facebook, of course, had instantly notified them about what I was doing.

In George Orwell’s 1984, Big Brother’s watchful, totalitarian eye is omnipresent. It is a terrifying story of a world without privacy. Today, we live with the Big Friend of Facebook and he seems to be a much nicer guy than Big Brother – so nice, that nearly a billion of us show little reluctance telling him more than we probably should.

Facebook will only grow and become more pervasive. It is not hard to imagine that humans will eventually have their lives recorded from birth to death on the pages of Facebook. It is a type of immortality, I suppose. But, there will be moments when we long for a place to hide, a refuge where no one is watching what we do and no one is insistently asking to be our friend.

Article source: http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/topoftheticket/la-na-tt-facebook-20120409,0,369196.story

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Google Beats Out Apple, Facebook, And Twitter For Most Popular Tech Brand: Poll

April 10, 2012 by admin  
Filed under Twitter News

Google

If the tech world were a high school, Google, apparently, would be crowned prom queen.

According to an ABC News/Washington Post poll released on April 5, Google beat out Apple, Facebook, and Twitter to win the title of most popular tech brand.

Langer Research Associates, a survey research management and consulting firm, contacted 1,007 adults from March 28 through April 1 to gauge their opinions of mega tech companies like Google, Apple, Facebook, and Twitter.

The poll shows that a whopping 82 percent of Americans hold a favorable opinion of Google overall, while 53 percent hold a “strongly” favorable opinion of the expansive Internet company.

Apple rolls in at a close second: 74 percent of Americans express a favorable opinion of the company overall, while only 37 percent express a “strongly” favorable opinion. Facebook and Twitter bring up the rear with 58 percent and 34 percent of Americans, respectively, expressing favorable opinions of the social networks.

LOOK:

The poll also reveals that the tech companies’ popularity seems to peak within different demographics. For example, people with household incomes of $100,000 or more seem to favor Google and Apple most; 93 and 91 percent of people within this demographic express favorable opinions of Google and Apple, respectively.

Unsurprisingly, Facebook seems to be most popular with young adults, 76 percent of whom express a favorable opinion of the social network. Twitter, on the other hand, is seen favorably by only 42 percent of young adults and unfavorably by nearly the same percentage, 43 percent.

In addition to being popular with American consumers, Google seems to be pretty well-liked by its employees, too. According to a March survey by Glassdoor, Google scored higher than Facebook in employee satisfaction ratings of the company overall, compensation/benefits, and work/life balance.

The Atlantic calls attention to the fact that these numbers seem to be pretty high considering some of the privacy concerns that have arisen for a few of these companies in recent weeks.

Even Google CEO Larry Page is aware of the complicated relationship that often exists between customers and companies. As The Atlantic pointed out, he touched on the subject in a letter to investors posted on April 5, writing:

We have always wanted Google to be a company that is deserving of great love. But we recognize this is an ambitious goal because most large companies are not well-loved, or even seemingly set up with that in mind. We’re lucky to have a very direct relationship with our users, which creates a strong incentive for us to do the right thing.

Given the extent to which companies like Google, Facebook, Apple, and Twitter have become engrained in our everyday lives — and how much slack we’re apparently willing to give them — it seems they may be off the hook…at least for now.

What do you think of the results of this poll? Which tech company do you like best? Let us know in the comments, then take a look through the slideshow (below) to see the 9 most valuable tech brands in the U.S., according to a report from September 2011.

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Article source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/09/google-apple-facebook-twitter-most-popular-tech-brand_n_1412489.html

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