Post by Cultures You on Oct 21, 2023 1:52:39 GMT -5
Finally, here are the books to keep on hand after reading, studying and meditating on them in case they inspire you; because even when you write the most banal post in the world, the one that perhaps you don't feel like writing today, if written well it has something to say:Network and privacy nexnova-blog-news Privacy Typewriter Key. Grunge Background. Sofia Coppola recently declared in an interview that she doesn't like social networks because it doesn't give her any pleasure to share her private life with strangers.
The American director recently turned forty and evidently belongs to that generation that acts as a watershed between the non-digital and the digital natives: two different worlds, two generations that have an antipodal concept photo editor of privacy . If we forty-year-olds grew up with a clear idea of what is private and what can be said in public, today's teenagers and twenty-year-olds have a concept of privacy that is totally different from ours. Of course, it's not that they don't have it, the limit has simply moved.
When years ago Mark Zuckerberg declared that thanks to social networks the perception of privacy had changed and it was therefore natural that Facebook would make our information more accessible to the whole world, no one was too upset. He was obviously right and Facebook users continued to enrich their profiles with photos and personal information. Facebook and other social networks have therefore flourished by collecting and storing news about us, our holidays and our marital quarrels, throwing everything in the face of strangers who have the misfortune of coming into contact with friends of our friends and for whom we forgot to raise the privacy setting on our profile.
The American director recently turned forty and evidently belongs to that generation that acts as a watershed between the non-digital and the digital natives: two different worlds, two generations that have an antipodal concept photo editor of privacy . If we forty-year-olds grew up with a clear idea of what is private and what can be said in public, today's teenagers and twenty-year-olds have a concept of privacy that is totally different from ours. Of course, it's not that they don't have it, the limit has simply moved.
When years ago Mark Zuckerberg declared that thanks to social networks the perception of privacy had changed and it was therefore natural that Facebook would make our information more accessible to the whole world, no one was too upset. He was obviously right and Facebook users continued to enrich their profiles with photos and personal information. Facebook and other social networks have therefore flourished by collecting and storing news about us, our holidays and our marital quarrels, throwing everything in the face of strangers who have the misfortune of coming into contact with friends of our friends and for whom we forgot to raise the privacy setting on our profile.