Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Do you fake to look authentic on Facebook?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Aug, 2014 09:49 AM
    Do you photoshop your image to impress your Facebook friends? Join the fake social media club.
     
    According to an interesting study, presenting an authentic image on social network sites includes an element of fakery.
     
    "Being authentic is very important for social media users. At the same time, users also admitted faking parts of their online image in order to conform to social norms and expectations," said researchers from Aalto University in Finland.
     
    By focusing on Facebook and Last.fm, researchers came to the conclusion that being real is much more acceptable according to social norms.
     
    "We also encountered a widespread disdain by users for what is known as profile tuning, or intentionally sharing content designed to depict the user in a false way," said Suvi Uski from Aalto University.
     
    Sharing personal content online on social network sites has become a common activity for increasing numbers of people around the world.
     
    "Our study reveals is a common belief that sharing content in a way that is considered to be excessive, attention seeking or somehow portrays that individual in a fake manner is judged extremely negatively," Uski noted.
     
    While social norms required individuals to be real in their sharing behaviour, presenting oneself in the right way through sharing often necessitated an element of faking," co-author Airi Lampinen added.
     
    In addition, users of Facebook have a high degree of control on what is shared with others but researchers found they often chose not to share anything for fear of conveying the wrong message to fellow users.
     
    "Consequently our desire to be regarded as authentic in social media can also prove to be difficult to achieve. A desire to conform actually inhibits a truthful unencumbered sharing of content," the study emphasised.
     
    The paper appeared online in the journal New Media and Society.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    180 Google satellites to bring entire planet online

    180 Google satellites to bring entire planet online
    When you are busy chatting or surfing the internet, do you know that nearly 4.8 billion people - or two-third of the world's population - are not yet online? This is going to change soon.

    180 Google satellites to bring entire planet online

    Japan home to world's most sophisticated toilets

    Japan home to world's most sophisticated toilets
    Japan is home to the world's most sophisticated toilets, with consumers being able to choose from gold-plated and aquarium-equipped models, as well as one commode that gives the user the feeling of being a ski jumper.

    Japan home to world's most sophisticated toilets

    Forget speed, this device can detect alcohol in moving cars

    Forget speed, this device can detect alcohol in moving cars
    Breath alcohol testers or breathalysers that traffic police use to check your bubbly quotient when you drive can soon be things of the past. No, don't feel excited yet.

    Forget speed, this device can detect alcohol in moving cars

    Soon, electric wires to charge your cars, phones

    Soon, electric wires to charge your cars, phones
    So far, electric cables have been used only to transmit electricity. But soon, you will be able to power your mp3 player, smartphone and electric car from cables that can store energy.

    Soon, electric wires to charge your cars, phones

    Why not copy-print humans on other planets?

    Why not copy-print humans on other planets?
    What if, instead of sending humans to other planets, we made an exact copy on the site and colonised other planets to ensure survival of the human race for eons?

    Why not copy-print humans on other planets?

    This Korean sprinter robot can beat Usain Bolt!

    This Korean sprinter robot can beat Usain Bolt!
    South Korean scientists have taken inspiration from the prehistoric Velociraptor dinosaur to create one of the world's simplest and fastest robots - the Raptor.

    This Korean sprinter robot can beat Usain Bolt!