What if information spread more quickly than a virus?
What if all the knowledge and insights shared at a White House event on HIV/AIDS could be shared across all the social networks that people have access to?
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
What if all the knowledge and insights shared at a White House event on HIV/AIDS could be shared across all the social networks that people have access to?
A very subjective guide to using Twitter to stay up to date on health and technology.
The Gov 2.0 Expo was a smorgasbord of policy, technology, and citizen engagement. Aaron Smith and Susannah Fox share their notes.
Some 19% of internet users now say they use Twitter or another service to share updates about themselves, or to see updates about others–up from 11% in April.
How we measure Twitter and status updating (and an invitation to help us improve).
Americans’ pursuit of health takes place within a widening network of both online and offline sources.
The public ranks the internet most useful as a source of information on the virus. Where and how are people finding flu facts online?
In the decade since Napster’s launch, selling recorded music has become as much of an art as making the music itself.
Our “Networked Families” report contains data about the “new connectedness” or what Twitterers call “ambient intimacy.”
For a host of reasons, the new administration needs to develop a national broadband strategy but research suggests that users must be central actors in its design.
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