Born manual bon-ton on the web: how to behave in meetings online
The etiquette of Monsignor Giovanni Della Casa revisited for the new digital squares, the social network, the latest face of modernity. A dictate the rules of the bon ton, even the 'netiquette' (the label of the network) to maintain those relationships through social network Facebook, MySpace, Netlang, Lindedln, Bado and Twitter, is the site www.ilcerimonaile.it created eight years ago by Mark Consentino and Stefano Filippone-Thaulero, officers of the Senate, to make life easier for those who still want to use good manners in their social relationships.
The square of the electronic social network, which has sent the chat in the attic, it is becoming increasingly crowded: it is estimated that, worldwide, are now over 350 million people who attend, each day's work put on, or near, a little of their time . In Italy it is estimated that at least ten million users of social network, especially men between 18 and 44 years, who spend about 30 minutes a day. Figures are as to fade the first time a TV commercial.
How to remember the two young champions of good manners, all began just over ten years ago, the dawn of the Internet, when Andrew Weinreich, American lawyer, launched the site sixDegrees.com ', based on the theory of "six degrees of separation "(from a great comedy by John heal and later by the same name the film), which you can reach any person with at most five intermediaries.
A few years later appeared Friendster, a chain of letters to "friends of friends"; Linkedin, the first focused on professional con
tacts, and Myspace. And then, in 2004, saw the light for Facebook found nineteen of Mark Zuckerberg, who wanted to make new friends at Harvard, creating a digital yearbook of pupils. New channels of social relations that have been triggered even economic interests because of their enormous potential. So Rupert Murdoch bought Myspace for 580 million dollars, while the value of Facebook is estimated at 15 billion dollars.
In this gigantic global virtual you 'search' and you 'meet' at all hours of day or night, to share state of mind and curiosity, but also the interests and tastes (music, readings, film preferences, etc..).
But especially for build new relationships and does not lack love. And last but not least, even for "towing". Although everyone knows that the Net is always better as it really is and that the meeting in person, then, calls for the most part a disappointment. If not dangerous situations or even tragic, as more and more tell the stories.
This incredible transformation of the socio-instrumental interpersonal communication, "true anthropological mutation," for its huge, endless and, too often, uncontrolled potential requires new rules of behavior. Because cyberspace can not and should not be a free zone where you can enjoy impunity, nor a kind of far west where the rules do not apply, if not the strongest.
"We're not talking about how to avoid fraud or sophisticated programs with which the companies will meet with targeted product offerings. Speaks of the old rules of etiquette," writes Mark Consentino and Stefano Filippone-Thaulero online by submitting their essential manual bon ton digital.
The square of the electronic social network, which has sent the chat in the attic, it is becoming increasingly crowded: it is estimated that, worldwide, are now over 350 million people who attend, each day's work put on, or near, a little of their time . In Italy it is estimated that at least ten million users of social network, especially men between 18 and 44 years, who spend about 30 minutes a day. Figures are as to fade the first time a TV commercial.
How to remember the two young champions of good manners, all began just over ten years ago, the dawn of the Internet, when Andrew Weinreich, American lawyer, launched the site sixDegrees.com ', based on the theory of "six degrees of separation "(from a great comedy by John heal and later by the same name the film), which you can reach any person with at most five intermediaries.
A few years later appeared Friendster, a chain of letters to "friends of friends"; Linkedin, the first focused on professional con
In this gigantic global virtual you 'search' and you 'meet' at all hours of day or night, to share state of mind and curiosity, but also the interests and tastes (music, readings, film preferences, etc..).
But especially for build new relationships and does not lack love. And last but not least, even for "towing". Although everyone knows that the Net is always better as it really is and that the meeting in person, then, calls for the most part a disappointment. If not dangerous situations or even tragic, as more and more tell the stories.
This incredible transformation of the socio-instrumental interpersonal communication, "true anthropological mutation," for its huge, endless and, too often, uncontrolled potential requires new rules of behavior. Because cyberspace can not and should not be a free zone where you can enjoy impunity, nor a kind of far west where the rules do not apply, if not the strongest.
"We're not talking about how to avoid fraud or sophisticated programs with which the companies will meet with targeted product offerings. Speaks of the old rules of etiquette," writes Mark Consentino and Stefano Filippone-Thaulero online by submitting their essential manual bon ton digital.
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