Archive for April, 2017

6 credit union marketing tricks that work every time – CUinsight.com (press release)

If you are managing the social marketing content at your credit union then youll want to read these 6 credit union marketing tricks that work every time. As a content marketing agency for credit unions, we know first hand what tricks work every time.

Offer an Internal Staff Contest to Gain More Followers

Is your credit union relatively new to social media? Maybe you are looking to grow your followers? The first place we typically start with new clients is to have their credit union offer an internal contest to their staff on Facebook (but this can be replicated on any platform, like Instagram).

Simply ask your staff to build up your followers with their family and friends to be entered to win a monetary reward (i.e. $100 Visa Gift Card). For every friend the staff member gets to like the CUs Facebook page, his or her name will go into the pot to win! If 10 friends like the CUs page, then that staff members name will be entered 10 times to win! This type of contest has been proven to be successful for several clients, and it also helps to boost excitement around the social movement among the staff at a CU.

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6 credit union marketing tricks that work every time - CUinsight.com (press release)

Murder on Facebook raises big censorship questions: What should social-media companies do about violent content? – Salon

On Easter Sunday horrific footage of a 74-year-old man being gunned down on a Cleveland sidewalk was posted on Facebook by his killer, reigniting an ongoing debate over how social-media content should be policed.

But effective strategies forblocking every piece of offensive and illegal content have been elusive and may never be 100 percent effective, according to some experts. Others including Facebook itself say more can and should be done to root out offensive content, including hate speech, horrific and illegal snuff videos and fake news items that mold the opinions of gullible users.

Facebook says it receives millions of complaints objecting tocontent everyweek from its nearly 2 billion active users. When the company receives a complaint, an algorithm automatically flags the content, which is then reviewed by moderators to quickly determine if itviolates the law or the companys terms and conditions.

Footage of the murder of Robert Godwin Sr. by deranged killer Steve Stephens, 37, who committed suicide on Tuesday following a police chase in Pennsylvania, was publicly viewable on Stephens Facebook profile for about two hours on Sunday. Facebook said it disabled Stephens account 23 minutes after it received reports of the murder video, but it was publicly viewable long enough for users to capture the footage, prompting a pleaon Twitter from one of Godwins grandchildren for people tostop sharing the video.

Desmond Patton,an assistant professor of social work at Columbia University, said that while the Godwin murder video should clearly have been taken down, it one extreme example of a larger issue. Companies like Facebook, Twitter and Google (which owns YouTube), he said, need to recruit specialists and elicit feedback from community leaders to improve how content is moderated, including material that might not seem offensive to every user.

I study violence on social media and all of the [problematic] content that I see almost never gets taken down, Patton told Salon. If youre just using tech people from Silicon Valley [as content monitors,] youre going to miss a lot of things. You need to diversify who makes these decisions.

Facebook declined to comment to Salon about thestrategies its considering to fortify its efforts to block objectionable and illegal content uploaded by its users, but having a more aggressive content filtering system could have unintended consequences. For example, would a stricterpolicy lead to the censorship of footage like the July 2016 shooting of Philando Castile by a Minnesota police officer? It could be argued that this video servesthe publics interest because it viscerally highlights the ongoing problem of excessive force inflicted on African-Americans by members of law enforcement.

Sarah Esther Lageson, a sociologist at Rutgers Universitys School of Criminal Justice, saidthat Facebook is under intense pressure to take a stance and define its position on monitoring user-uploaded content, which couldleadto more surveillance something that not all Facebook users will welcome. But she said the benefits of having an open and easy way to produce and share online videos, which can highlight injustices and expose crimes, outweigh the negative effects of giving people so much freedom.

Facebook will likely provide an array of creative solutions and will likely do their best to streamline oversight of user-uploaded content using [artificial intelligence] or machine learning, but I wont make an argument that those efforts would catch every instance of an extremely rare event like this, Lageson told Salon in an email.

Besides, she said in a follow-up phone conversation, horrific crimes take place in public no matter what we do to prevent them; its the new medium by which criminals can advertise their crimes that concerns people.

This is clearly an innovative way of doing something that has always been done: People have always killed people in public, mass shootings happen, she said. That being said the internet is a way to get into peoples homes, which I think is what scares people, that you cant even feel protected from witnessing a crime on your cell phone or your laptop. Its one thing to see a crime happen on the street and another thing to see it when youre on your couch.

As Facebook and other social-networking service providers struggle to moderate the immense content stream coming at them from their users, the solution to the many problems that can arise is complicated. It requires, as Patton suggested, more feedback from experts and community members abouthow to establish policies for all types of harmful, violent and offensive content. And as Lageson pointed out, the fact that people can produce and share content so easily has helped fight crime and injustice.

The solution to the problem of preventing offensive, hateful, violent and murderous content from being distributed onsocial networks is as complicated as people are themselves, and there may never be a solution that satisfies everyones concerns.

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Murder on Facebook raises big censorship questions: What should social-media companies do about violent content? - Salon

Bill To Protect Arizona Student Journalists From Censorship Hits A Roadblock – KJZZ


KJZZ
Bill To Protect Arizona Student Journalists From Censorship Hits A Roadblock
KJZZ
A measure that would protect student journalists from censorship hit a roadblock in the state legislature. House Majority Leader John Allen pulled the bill from consideration after more than an hour of debate. The measure would declare that student ...
Student journalism from censorship legislation hits a roadblockSierra Vista Herald

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Bill To Protect Arizona Student Journalists From Censorship Hits A Roadblock - KJZZ

Censorship on TV? Soaps, reality shows are crossing all limits, says Pahlaj Nihalani – Hindustan Times

Central Board of Film Certification chief Pahlaj Nihalani has said that restrictions must be imposed on the inflow of software on TV before its too late. Reports suggest that the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting is actually considering a more stringent policy to channelise and restrain free flow of content on the medium.

Far from abolishing film censorship, the Ministry Of Information & Broadcasting is actually considering a more stringent monitoring agency to channelise and restrain the free flow of content on the home-viewing medium.

While the CBFC chief Pahlaj Nihalani refrained from discussing the I&Bs plans to monitor content on television, he lashed out hard at what he considers the free flow of muck into homes. Television soaps, reality shows and crime shows are crossing all limits. Shows like Crime Petrol and Savdhan India show the most gruesome and heinous crimes in graphic detail.

Real-life people are named in the fictional recreation of crime stories.Women are raped in incestuous attacks, housewives and minor girls are shown to be violated. If the same content was shown in any film we at the CBFC would have to clamp down heavily on the content, he said.

Nihalani feels restrictions must be imposed on the inflow of software on television before its too late. Why are filmmakers required to get a new censor certification for their films to be shown on television when all the rest of content made specially for television gets to go on air unchecked? This free flow of content in television must stop. Its affecting the natural psychological development of young minds. Parents are worried, he said.

Follow @htshowbiz for more

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Censorship on TV? Soaps, reality shows are crossing all limits, says Pahlaj Nihalani - Hindustan Times

EU hands over social media control to child rights activists – Prothom Alo (English)

The European Union delegations on Thursday handed over control of their social media accounts to Plan International Bangladesh child rights activists.

To celebrate the launch of the revised EU Guidelines on the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of the Child, the European External Action Service is partnering with Plan International to organise a global youth takeover of EU Delegation social media accounts.

Throughout April, young people across Africa, Asia and the Americas will share their views on the challenges children in their country face, and what more needs to be done to ensure every childs rights are realized, directly from the Twitter and Facebook accounts of participating EU Delegations.

In Bangladesh, the Youth Takeover has taken place on 20 April 2017, from 10:00 am onwards.

The revised guidelines set the EUs overarching strategy to defend and promote childrens rights in the world. They set out the actions that EU officials should take, and outline the principles underpinning EU action, the priorities for EU engagement and the tools which can be used.

The total population of Bangladesh consists of 50% of youth of which 40% are children.

"Through this social media takeover, we got the opportunity to hear the viewpoints of two young Bangladeshis on child marriage," said ambassador Pierre Mayaudon, the European Union head of delegation.

He said they also discussed impediments that school-going girls face in this country. "I am happy to learn that today they conducted live sessions on our Facebook to generate opinion and awareness about issues affecting girls in Bangladesh. We hope all those who have consulted our Facebook today will find in their remarks a source of inspiration".

Country Director, Plan International Bangladesh Orla Murphy said the Plan International is fully committed to promoting the realisation of all children's rights, so that every child is able to learn, lead, decide and thrive.

In Bangladesh, 26 million children live below the national poverty line, while 52 percent of girls are married before the age of 18 - one of the highest rates of child marriage in the world, according to the Plan International Bangladesh.

The total population of Bangladesh consists of 50 percent of youth of which 40 percent are children.

"I believe it's important that children and young people's voice and views are heard," said Jahir Rayan, a participant of the initiative.

EU's technique in promoting children's right by mean of Youth Takeover via social media is very innovative and will definitely be impactful among the youth, said Renaissance, another participant of the initiative.

Throughout April, young people across Africa, Asia and the Americas will share their views on the challenges children in their country face, and what more needs to be done to ensure every child's rights are realized, directly from the Twitter and Facebook accounts of participating EU Delegations.

The EU Guidelines for the Rights of the Child (2017) aim at promoting and protecting equally all the rights that children, especially the most marginalized children have in order to ensure that no child is left behind.

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EU hands over social media control to child rights activists - Prothom Alo (English)