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Watch this important and enlightening documentary about your online privacy: Big Brother Big Business by CNBC.

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Escaping Online in 2011

The sputtering economy in 2011 left us feeling fed up and disengaged, but at least we could escape online. So how exactly did we enjoy ourselves? In the last of a series of summing up 2011, this blog reveals how more and more, we find pleasure online.

On any given day, 58% go online for no other reason than to have fun or pass the time (Pew Research Center), and 37% turn to the Internet to help diagnose their illnesses (Marist Poll).

65% visit social-networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, but 7% have gotten in trouble at school or work, and 7% think they’ve lost a potential job, because of a comment or picture they shared online (Harris Interactive). Nonetheless, 27% of men and 23% of women say they have been photographed nude, and 16% have used their cellphones for “sexting”—sending naked photos or erotic messages to a partner.

The fun and games aren’t limited to partners, however: 31% of men and 26% of women admit to contacting an ex via Facebook or email. In a world where everyone is connected, trust doesn’t come easily: 41% of men and 47% of women have suspected their partners of cheating (Playboy/Harris Interactive).

- As seen in The Week
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NetLingo in the News

 

NetLingo has been featured twice on NBC News! Cited on NBC World News as a top Web site for parents and educators to go for help in decoding text messages and online jargon, and in a segment was called "Safe and Secure - Crack the Secrets of Cyber Code." A year earlier NetLingo was featured on a NBC News special called "Internet Site Can Solve Mysteries of Online Shorthand."

Read more: NBC World Now "Safe and Secure - Crack the Secrets of Cyber Code" (PDF)
>> NBC News "Internet Site Can Solve Mysteries of Online Shorthand" (PDF)

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