Twitter

Don Wassall

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What do you think of "tweeting"? I've never done it, never even been to the Twitter website, but it seems to be as ubiquitous now as Facebook as a way of communicating.

Any value to it? Should Caste Football tweet, if a website or virtual community is allowed to do so, or is it another sign of decadence and decline that shouldn't be utilized?
 

Riddlewire

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Jul 12, 2007
Messages
2,570
I created a twitter account about a year ago.
I've never used it. Not even once. No reason. What am I going to do? Tell my aunt Betty what I had for breakfast?

However,
Twitter is a fantastic resource for keeping track of cultural trends and, occasionally, breaking news stories. It's not exactly "random sample Gallup data", but it can give you an idea of what stories are becoming popular, why, and which groups feel what way about them. I searched Twitter after each Broncos game this season (after Tebow got the job). The flow of responses was very revealing. Lots of jew atheists professed their profound hatred of him. Black athletes generally were supportive. Black journalists hate him more than the jews. Everybody else was thrilled by him.
Maybe there was no value at all in these snapshots. Maybe it's just a part of the wire of riddles that snares us and keeps us looking at Circus Elephants while we should be paying attention to the fire burning in the stands.
I'm not sure how twitter would be of any benefit to Caste Football.
 

Quiet Speed

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Amazing coincidence, Don. I was thinking about this very thing this afternoon. I’m almost as clueless as you as to the proper way to utilize the site. Tweeting significant and relevant article links, or the latest Caste Football article link may have some value. Gaining followers to the account should not be difficult, I would think. There are probably a ton of negatives that I am not aware of.
 
L

Lew

Guest
I agree with Riddlewire, Twitter's pretty good for keeping up with cultural trends and the occasional breaking news story. I use the search feature a lot whenever I want to know what other people are thinking. Oh and yeah those black journalists definitely had a lot of hate for Tebow. I wonder why :icon_rolleyes:
 

DixieDestroyer

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I don't know squat about Twitter. I don't even have a Facebook account. To borrow a phrase from my late Grandmother..."I don't care a thing about it!". ;-)
 

Rebajlo

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Thanks to Facebook and Twitter, the unwashed masses are now gripped by an insatiably burning desire to relate all of the eminently irrelevant minutiae of their incredibly shallow lives to the world at large.

As a general rule, where there's one moron, there are usually several dozen others in the immediate vicinity - but Twitter technology conveniently enables like-minded dipsticks to exchange jaw-dropping inanities across globe-spanning distances.

Johnno - 25 years old (mental age: 15 with multiple "learning disabilities"), unemployed, "still ****in' single", addicted to booze, mull, gambling and the footy informs his multitude of "online friends" about his current, vitally significant "real time" activities (Tweeted, of course, from the grinding solitude of his grimy Housing Commission flat):

Tweet 1: Damn, #guts are rumbling something fierce, off to the #crapper to crank out a meaty one

Tweet 2: Right, pants are down, I'm on the #dunny, breathing deeply

Tweet 3: Ready, set, ggggggggggnnnnnnnnnnnnnn!!!!

Tweet 4: Gggggggnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn!!!!!!!!

Tweet 5: Pain's ****in' scorching! #Arse feels like it's gonna burst! can hardly feel my fingers

Tweet 6: Awwwww, ****in' yeah!!! Man, what a relief!!! Monster shot out like a rocket! Porcelain cracker, that was

Tweet 7: Hang on, blood galore. Help! I've ruptured my colon!

Tweet 8: Fingers still numb, but wiping gory date.

Tweet 9: Off to call proctologist

Needless to say, I don't have a Twitter account, nor do I have a facebook account...
 

backrow

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i have faccebook, partly due to the nature of the business i'm in, partly to keep in touch with people i know, by far the easiest way. i've moved around so much, country hopping in the past pretty much every year that without i'd simply lose touch with many of my buddies.

now twitter, i don't see a point, from a personal standpoint, but for caste football it could be useful in spreading the word.
 

Riddlewire

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Messages
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Facebook is a government data mining project.
Yes, yes, private company, etc. You don't think Big Brother has the key to the back door? Given to them by Zuckerberg himself?
If you use Facebook independently, you should stop now.

Almost the entirety of Facebook’s business model, then, hinges on how much data it can accrue about its users, and thus it should be no surprise — being a capitalistic corporation and all — that almost every Facebook feature collects or extracts yet more information about you. It has now got to the stage where, in printed form, Facebook stores hundreds of pages of your personal data.

In recent months, though, Facebook seems to have stepped things up a notch. Where providing data on Facebook used to be a very active experience — you clicked a Like button, or checked in from a restaurant — Facebook is now employing extensive image recognition, data mining, and machine learning algorithms to analyze your uploads and activities, hoping to find a link or tag that it can monetize.*

You know that Facebook provides facial recognition when you upload photos of your friends — and now it seems, it also does location recognition (pictured right). In this case, one Facebook engineer has gone on the record and said that the algorithm simply looks for the name of the location in the photo album (“Postcards from Zambiaâ€), but there have been numerous reports of people saying that Facebook also suggests tags even when no obvious data points exist. In all likelihood, Facebook is using a host of different signals to work out where an image was taken. Your IP address (which can accurately provide a geolocation), the EXIF data embedded in images (including GPS coordinates), and machine learning (is the image similar to one of Facebook’s billion other tagged images?), can all be used to derive the image’s location — and, significantly, these are techniques that the average user knows nothing about.

It doesn’t stop there, though. Did you know that the Facebook mobile apps log your location, irrespective of whether you publicly check in or not? If you link Rdio or Spotify to Facebook, they get your music listening habits, too. Both of these have been combined into a new feature called Suggested Events, which does exactly what you might think — it tells you when your favorite band is playing — but of course, Facebook can sell this as a targeted ad.

* (Or "seditious" activity that Homeland Security can use to incarcerate you under their new National Defense Authorization Act, -RW)
 

Highlander

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Messages
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Like any technology, it can be used for good or bad, positive or negative. I don't have a Twitter account and don't know a great deal about it, but if used positively and constructively, I think it would be beneficial for CF to have one.
 

Don Wassall

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Thanks for all the input. Maybe next year I'll look into starting a Twitter account for CF as my time is especially limited this year with my involvement in American Third Position's presidential campaign between now and November in addition to my other duties.
 

whiteathlete33

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Mar 18, 2007
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Here is something that occurred at Don Bosco in NJ,which is a Catholic high school that loves to recruit affletes to play for the team.


orange_arrow.png

Northjersey.com : Sports : H.S. Sports





[h=1]Don Bosco football star gets expelled over explicit posts on Twitter[/h]
Friday, January 20, 2012 Last updated: Friday January 20, 2012, 7:30 AM
BY DARREN COOPER
STAFF WRITER
The Record
Print | E-mail
Don Bosco Prep expelled the highly recruited football star Yuri Wright on Wednesday for com*ments made on his Twitter feed, according to the head football coach, Greg Toal.
RECORD FILE PHOTO
Yuri Wright


Wright, a defensive back from Spring Valley, N.Y., has since deleted his Twit*ter account.
“He’s a good kid, and I think he has a bright college future, and I wish him the best of luck,â€￾ said Toal. “There is no question Don Bosco had to do what it had to do.â€￾
The comments were of a graph*ic sexual nature.
Wright did not respond to mes*sages left for him. The Don Bosco athletic director, Brian McAleer, refused to comment.
Toal said he had cautioned his players multiple times about their use of social media and that there would be consequences.
Wright, listed as the 40th-best recruit in the nation by ESPN, was one of four Don Bosco football players to compete in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl in San Antonio this month. Before that game, he said his four college final*ists were Notre Dame, Michigan, Rutgers and Colorado.
Wright, a senior, was a first*team All-Bergen County choice and a second-team All-North Jer*sey selection this year.
 

Rebajlo

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N.S.W. - Australia
Following on the heels of the mobile phone and texting craze, the advent of Facebook and Twitter has further mutated the already patently unhealthy norms of "modern" social interaction.

People now spend steadily increasing proportions of their free time (and, quite often, work time) in the "virtual" worlds of social media networks, sitting on their haemorrhoid-packed arses in front of computer screens, in constant "communication" with their "virtual" friends, many of whom they have never physically met and wouldn't know from Adam if they passed them on the street.

Now, what really passes them by is life itself. Instead of going out, engaging in "real" activities and thus meeting others and socialising in the traditional face-to-face manner, many people choose to confine themselves to some dim room or basement (or, in the case of the perennially unemployed who "can't afford" both booze and internet access, a public library or internet cafe), browsing and typing away the hours, days, months, and years.

Such specimens may have hundreds of "Facebook friends", yet often won't have anyone they can actually talk to or spend time with. That's why I had our notional Johnno tweeting about his bowel-busting adventures from the loneliness of an otherwise unoccupied flat.

One can see plenty of these Facebook-dependent types in public libraries. I recently witnessed a pair of "males" who seamlessly fitted the cheap t-shirt stereotype of the pitiful "online creep": one was a pot-bellied, fat-necked slob, the other a spindly gnat whose shoelaces were a lot thicker than his "barbaric" limbs. Needless to say, both were prematurely balding and clad in "garments" I wouldn't even use as garage rags.

This particular dynamic duo were excitedly ogling photos of some young girl posing in a bikini on her Facebook page, and weren't exactly being subtle about it. They were so hyped up that I was half expecting them to pop their miserable little wads on the spot (but no fear of that, as testicles are a vital prerequisite...). "Go on, go on!" squeals the red-faced Shoestring "Send her a message, man, send her a message!" Too bad that Fatso was in no shape to type anything, as he was displaying all of the outward signs of having partially swallowed his tongue. Thank God that I didn't have a firearm handy...

These striking internet studs have probably never even spoken to a female (especially to a female sporting the impressive equipment of the girl in the photos), let alone touched one - despite the endless hours of porn that they've doubtlessly "utilised", they wouldn't have the remotest clue about how to (gasp, s******) "do the business", even if a "chance" miraculously presented itself in the form of some pissed-up slag...

The disgusting episode above reveals a couple of things. In all honesty, genetic crap-outs like Shoestring and Fatso would be drooling losers in any era, Facebook or not, but the fact remains that fellows like this are becoming increasingly common as products of the "social media" age - and not only with regard to the ability to find a potential wife. Kids these days are likely to spend more time playing X-Box, Playstation or PC versions of sports than engaging in the genuine thing outdoors. It's truly disconcerting to see pint-sized children glued to a computer monitor - one has to wonder about what manner of "well-adjusted" adult such kids shall become.

Then we have the important issue of privacy. In the past, privacy was something which was cultivated, respected, and invariably quite jealously guarded. People would keep to themselves and maintain barriers between their own small inner circle and their broader "non-core" range of friends and acquaintances, let alone strangers. Facebook and Twitter, however, have actively encouraged the exact opposite, conditioning people to the idea of "sharing" everything, including their most intimate details, with the "online community". This is a newer, more sinister, yet seemingly whimsical outgrowth of the voyeurism which was initially spawned and perpetuated by the "cult of celebrity" orbiting around magazines and television shows dedicated to sensationalising even the most trivial gestures made by "show-business stars".

By "sharing" their poxy little lives via social media, every idiot on the planet with access to the internet can now feel like a "celebrity" - the race for "friends" and "followers" is on, with the main means of attracting such supposed disciples conveniently consisting of posting more and more information about him or herself. But, like Riddlewire said, the material lodged on Facebook can (and without doubt is) utilised by governments - it's akin to voluntarily participating in an incipient version of an Orwellian "Big Brother" network. When one strips away the superficial "recreational" patina, Facebook and Twitter are a dictatorial government's dream come very much true.

Posting photos of oneself or one's family members online is utter madness, yet it's become an everyday practice - I should be inured to it by now, but I'm still struck anew each time I see somebody using their own photo as a forum avatar, which is quite common on may sites.

Sorry for the rant, but all of this bollocks really gets on my nerves, as the dopey population (the majority of whom have next to no personal judgement and shall unhesitatingly follow any trend - simply witness the readily-protean "tastes" in music and "fashion" and the ease with which propaganda of any persuasion can triumph within a relatively short space of time) is willingly being drawn into an all-new net of social distortion.

Finally getting back to the original question of Twitter's potential usefulness to Caste Football: despite what I have said above, if bunging out strategically-timed tweets could raise the profile of the site and consequently draw in some of the more "latently intelligent", yet currently brainwashed Negro-venerating clowns out there for the proverbial "awakening", then yes, give it a go.

Just as a parting observation about Twitter's value as a barometer (and fabricator) of public opinion, the very nature of the service makes it quite easy to manipulate. I'm sure that it wouldn't be difficult for "interested parties" to automatically flood the site with a ton of tweets propagating their particular angle on certain events, for example:

"Just like Reagan, Ron Paul is too old, best vote for the younger #Obama";

"DaQuanshon Jackson is innocent, he didn't rape that white girl, the 15 witnesses are obviously all #racists and the DNA tests were rigged";

"The guy's a blatant #anti-Semite, of course all #Jews are 100% loyal Americans whose sole allegiance is to the USA"; or even

"That arrogant Australian prick Rebajlo's posts in the notoriously #racist Caste Football forum are certainly long enough. Wish he'd just shut his big yap" :icon_wink:
 
Last edited:

frederic38

Hall of Famer
Joined
Jun 22, 2011
Messages
4,774
Location
france-grenoble
Following on the heels of the mobile phone and texting craze, the advent of Facebook and Twitter has further mutated the already patently unhealthy norms of "modern" social interaction.

People now spend steadily increasing proportions of their free time (and, quite often, work time) in the "virtual" worlds of social media networks, sitting on their haemorrhoid-packed arses in front of computer screens, in constant "communication" with their "virtual" friends, many of whom they have never physically met and wouldn't know from Adam if they passed them on the street.

Now, what really passes them by is life itself. Instead of going out, engaging in "real" activities and thus meeting others and socialising in the traditional face-to-face manner, many people choose to confine themselves to some dim room or basement (or, in the case of the perennially unemployed who "can't afford" both booze and internet access, a public library or internet cafe), browsing and typing away the hours, days, months, and years.

Such specimens may have hundreds of "Facebook friends", yet often won't have anyone they can actually talk to or spend time with. That's why I had our notional Johnno tweeting about his bowel-busting adventures from the loneliness of an otherwise unoccupied flat.

One can see plenty of these Facebook-dependent types in public libraries. I recently witnessed a pair of "males" who seamlessly fitted the cheap t-shirt stereotype of the pitiful "online creep": one was a pot-bellied, fat-necked slob, the other a spindly gnat whose shoelaces were a lot thicker than his "barbaric" limbs. Needless to say, both were prematurely balding and clad in "garments" I wouldn't even use as garage rags.

This particular dynamic duo were excitedly ogling photos of some young girl posing in a bikini on her Facebook page, and weren't exactly being subtle about it. They were so hyped up that I was half expecting them to pop their miserable little wads on the spot (but no fear of that, as testicles are a vital prerequisite...). "Go on, go on!" squeals the red-faced Shoestring "Send her a message, man, send her a message!" Too bad that Fatso was in no shape to type anything, as he was displaying all of the outward signs of having partially swallowed his tongue. Thank God that I didn't have a firearm handy...

These striking internet studs have probably never even spoken to a female (especially to a female sporting the impressive equipment of the girl in the photos), let alone touched one - despite the endless hours of porn that they've doubtlessly "utilised", they wouldn't have the remotest clue about how to (gasp, s******) "do the business", even if a "chance" miraculously presented itself in the form of some pissed-up slag...

The disgusting episode above reveals a couple of things. In all honesty, genetic crap-outs like Shoestring and Fatso would be drooling losers in any era, Facebook or not, but the fact remains that fellows like this are becoming increasingly common as products of the "social media" age - and not only with regard to the ability to find a potential wife. Kids these days are likely to spend more time playing X-Box, Playstation or PC versions of sports than engaging in the genuine thing outdoors. It's truly disconcerting to see pint-sized children glued to a computer monitor - one has to wonder about what manner of "well-adjusted" adult such kids shall become.

Then we have the important issue of privacy. In the past, privacy was something which was cultivated, respected, and invariably quite jealously guarded. People would keep to themselves and maintain barriers between their own small inner circle and their broader "non-core" range of friends and acquaintances, let alone strangers. Facebook and Twitter, however, have actively encouraged the exact opposite, conditioning people to the idea of "sharing" everything, including their most intimate details, with the "online community". This is a newer, more sinister, yet seemingly whimsical outgrowth of the voyeurism which was initially spawned and perpetuated by the "cult of celebrity" orbiting around magazines and television shows dedicated to sensationalising even the most trivial gestures made by "show-business stars".

By "sharing" their poxy little lives via social media, every idiot on the planet with access to the internet can now feel like a "celebrity" - the race for "friends" and "followers" is on, with the main means of attracting such supposed disciples conveniently consisting of posting more and more information about him or herself. But, like Riddlewire said, the material lodged on Facebook can (and without doubt is) utilised by governments - it's akin to voluntarily participating in an incipient version of an Orwellian "Big Brother" network. When one strips away the superficial "recreational" patina, Facebook and Twitter are a dictatorial government's dream come very much true.

Posting photos of oneself or one's family members online is utter madness, yet it's become an everyday practice - I should be inured to it by now, but I'm still struck anew each time I see somebody using their own photo as a forum avatar, which is quite common on may sites.

Sorry for the rant, but all of this bollocks really gets on my nerves, as the dopey population (the majority of whom have next to no personal judgement and shall unhesitatingly follow any trend - simply witness the readily-protean "tastes" in music and "fashion" and the ease with which propaganda of any persuasion can triumph within a relatively short space of time) is willingly being drawn into an all-new net of social distortion.

Finally getting back to the original question of Twitter's potential usefulness to Caste Football: despite what I have said above, if bunging out strategically-timed tweets could raise the profile of the site and consequently draw in some of the more "latently intelligent", yet currently brainwashed Negro-venerating clowns out there for the proverbial "awakening", then yes, give it a go.

Just as a parting observation about Twitter's value as a barometer (and fabricator) of public opinion, the very nature of the service makes it quite easy to manipulate. I'm sure that it wouldn't be difficult for "interested parties" to automatically flood the site with a ton of tweets propagating their particular angle on certain events, for example:

"Just like Reagan, Ron Paul is too old, best vote for the younger #Obama";

"DaQuanshon Jackson is innocent, he didn't rape that white girl, the 15 witnesses are obviously all #racists and the DNA tests were rigged";

"The guy's a blatant #anti-Semite, of course all #Jews are 100% loyal Americans whose sole allegiance is to the USA"; or even

"That arrogant Australian prick Rebajlo's posts in the notoriously #racist Caste Football forum are certainly long enough. Wish he'd just shut his big yap" :icon_wink:

hilarious post rebajlo :biggrin:
i also hate facebook and the other sites of this kind
i love how everybody on facebook has more than 200 "friends" while it's impossible to have so many real friends at the time
i find these fake relationships extremely annoying

i use facebook with a fake account though, because a lot of infos are on facebook, on various subjects
and with this fake account i can post on some websites that only allow you to comment throught facebook
 

Riddlewire

Master
Joined
Jul 12, 2007
Messages
2,570
Just in case some ignored my warning about Facebook, you should know that Google is the same type of entity.

Google announces privacy changes across products; users can’t opt out

By Cecilia Kang, Tuesday, January 24, 3:33 PM

Google said Tuesday it will require users to allow the company to follow their activities across e-mail, search, YouTube and other services, a radical shift in strategy that is expected to invite greater scrutiny of its privacy and competitive practices.

The information will enable Google to develop a fuller picture of how people use its growing empire of Web sites. Consumers will have no choice but to accept the changes.

The policy will take effect March 1 and will also impact Android mobile phone users, who are required to log in to Google accounts when they activate their phones.

Twitter is still mostly harmless because it's so worthless (unless you're a celebrity or news outlet). But anyone who uses Facebook or other social media that involves "real" personal information is just asking for trouble in the future.
 

Bronk

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Joined
Apr 13, 2005
Messages
962
Location
Texas
Yes, create a Twitter account.

Old guys like me have no use for Twitter, but young folk are plugged into it and you never know how a medium like that could capture someone's attention and expose them to a whole new set of ideas previously considered verboten.
 
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