This blog is dedicated to appreciating the different types of social media in the world and how we use them as whole showing the similarities and differences between different genders, age groups, and classes of people throughout the world. It also touches base with different forms of harassment done on social networking sites not only with common everyday persons but also political figures. Since being online and on the internet so much is become such a popular thing now in this day and age there are actually schools that are teaching their kids about how to use social medias and argue if this will help them in the long run build their own personality and be better prepared for what is going on everywhere around them. There is also a negative side of using social media, that is, by putting yourself out there you open up your world to more chances to be attacked by things like slut shaming. There are many different varieties of experiences to be had online and this blog is here to help show what those experiences are.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Age, Not Gender, Drives Social Media

This article shows the difference in types of social media used and which types are used more often then not with the two genders and the different age groups. Social medias are very fast growing sites online that are becoming more and more about who has more friends or followers and less about staying in touch with each other over time. Many of the younger generations of kids online are spending more time on social media networks than older generations spend on work related things such as emails. Social media networks are becoming increasingly more used by people all over the world and by people of all ages. 





Facebook enjoys broad adoption among users of all age groups and genders, other social media sites do not have such ubiquitous appeal, according to a survey from Netpop Research.
Facebook, in other words, is not the norm, Netpop found.
For example, Facebook's penetration among socially networked adults in the US is 90%, and the site enjoys roughly the same penetration among socially networked women age 18-34 (92%) and age 35+ (92%).
By contrast, YouTube's penetration among socially networked adults is 56%, but the video sharing site is far more popular among younger, social women (66%) and men (83%).

The use of Wikipedia and Twitter is also higher among younger, socially networked adults:
  • 65% of men and 48% of women age 18-34 use Wikipedia, compared with 40% of men and 28% of women age 35+.
  • 34% of young men and 24% of young women (24%) use Twitter, compared with 17% of men and 10% of women age 35+.
Below, additional findings from the report titled "Social Media Madness," by Netpop Research.
Younger Users Have Larger Networks of Friends
On average, younger Facebook users have two times more friends than older users, but there's virtually no difference between men and women: Younger women have roughly the same number of Facebook friends as younger men (305 vs. 304).


Similarly, older men and women (surprisingly) share nearly equal numbers of friends (139 vs. 133).
Allocation of Time Online Varies by Age
Some 146.5 million people in the US, or 79% of online adults, now use social networks, according to the report.
Among all socially networked adults, social media now accounts for 18% of time spent online, after entertainment (22%) and email (27%). However, those levels vary by age:
  • Young social networkers age 18-24 spend the most (25%) of their time online, and only 17% of their time with email.
  • Older social networkers age 35-44 spend 17% their time online with social networks, compared with 26% of their time with email.

Younger users also spend more time using social networks than older users.
For example, those age 18-24 spend twice as much time as those age 35-44 with social media (1 hour and 50 minutes vs. 54 minutes, per weekday).
Motivations for Using Social Media
A breakdown by age and gender accentuates the interest among older users, particularly women, in using social media to stay connected with others:
  • 42% of women use social media to stay-in-touch, compared with 34% of women age 18-34. 
  • Younger users (particularly men) use social media for a wider variety of reasons, particularly entertainment (28%).
  • Younger women spend the least amount of time (among the four age groups) using social media to find information (16%).

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