Originally posted by french frank
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Facebook - issues with, use of, anything about it....
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"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThat's striking most of us round here off, then!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostOne word of warning re friend requests: if you get a second request from someone already in your friend list you should ignore it as it's likely to be a scam.
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On the other side you wouldn’t believe how useful Facebook is to journalists. It never ceased to amaze me how much personal stuff people put on it - third party medical information on their children and relatives for example. It’s also used a lot by HMRC when they ask self employed people who declare profits of £5,000 how they can afford the two week stay in a villa in Ibiza.
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[QUOTE=RichardB;921577]It would be regarded as quite eccentric if someone of my profession were to have no "social media presence" so I do use Facebook (with the third party FBP extension that removes advertising and other annoying things before I see them), both as a private individual and as a representative of my place of work. It has its annoying aspects, and one does need to bear in mind that while it appears to be free this is because one is the product and not the consumer, but apart from professional matters and the occasional rant (and no doubt for what one forum member has called my "interlectual masturbation") I use it to stay in contact with many far flung friends, I mean real friends not Facebook "friends". Earlier this year an old and dear friend living on the west coast of the USA passed away (not someone anyone on this forum would know or have heard of) and through FB I was able to exchange thoughts with him and send love and support until the very end. I can put up with a lot of social media unpleasantness to be able to do something like that.[/QUOTE
My mother just passed and I put a message in fb. Many people around the world that I had scant communication with in years reached out and fb is very useful in times like these. My fb postings are otherwise confined to groups that I have joined, one being a music site that was founded by BBM;with his passing I got sucked into being a moderator. Another is a Zoom book club that my wife and I participate in, in which I guess I have become a de facto moderator since no one else organizes the meetings
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I regularly use Facebook and have no issues with it. I have over 1500 friends, many of whom are abroad and are fellow conchologists. I only accept requests from people who have more than 50 mutual friends or I have heard of. As Bryn said above, it's been great for staying in touch with old colleagues and friends.Best regards,
Jonathan
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostOne word of warning re friend requests: if you get a second request from someone already in your friend list you should ignore it as it's likely to be a scam.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostIt’s also used a lot by HMRC when they ask self employed people who declare profits of £5,000 how they can afford the two week stay in a villa in Ibiza.
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