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AML wrote:why the hell are people here so paranoid about showing their real identity online?
I think a lot of it probably stems from the fact that people here have zero education when it comes to PCs and the internet. Just fear of viruses and hacker attacks.
English is another barrier i suppose.
Most people ive asked about facebook often say they are afraid that people they dont know will learn private info from their page. I keep telling them that only people you know can access your info. (ie friends only setting)
Why wont the government spend more money on IT education in schools?
A lot of people look at the internet as some sort of foreign invention that doesnt apply to Japan. And at best its just a fad they use for some light entertainment.
Head in the sand as usual.
TennoChinko wrote:
The candor that one may use under an anonymous handle disappears if posting under one's real name. I'd bet most FG posters would post differently or not post at all if we were suddenly required to use 'real names' instead of handles.
Fullback wrote:Even Mark Zuckerberg was amazed that people would give up their personal information to him so easily. He thought they were stupid to do so, but he wasn't going to stop them.
There might be a lesson in that. It's not just "other" people, it may be a lack of trust in Facebook.
AML wrote:why the hell are people here so paranoid about showing their real identity online?
Mulboyne wrote:People have lost jobs when a mixi friend has grassed them up and the information trail has revealed their real identity.
Samurai_Jerk wrote:Any links? I'm not doubting you but I'd be interested to read any stories that may be out there.
Fullback wrote:I believe that a problem with using your real name is that everything you write on the internet exists forever.
Zeth3D wrote:Dont know if i really contributed anything to this arguement, but on a side note people who have their name in their email address (like my.name555@whatever) I have always personally thought were stupid and ametures on the internets.
Twitter Inc. and Japan's biggest homegrown social networking site mixi Inc. joined forces Wednesday to strengthen their ground against a rapidly expanding Facebook. For Twitter, the partnership with a local social network could point to a new strategy as the San Francisco-based microblogging service seeks to accelerate global growth. Japan is the company's second-biggest market after the US and has served as a key international testing ground of sorts.
Japanese was Twitter's first foreign language platform, and it opened its first overseas office in Tokyo earlier this year. In April, the company hired James Kondo in Japan as its first international country manager. Kondo said he didn't know if Twitter would forge similar partnerships in other countries. But the company is keen to see what happens with the experiment, which launched with a limited Christmas-themed application, he said...
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