Tag result for article published on Fri March 23 2018 4:29 pm. CLICK TITLE TO EXPAND.Tags: Arlington Cardinal Twitter, Arlingtoncardinal Twitter, Facebook, monopoly, monopoly power, social media, social media policy, twitter, Twitter policy
Twitter recently initiated a new policy that prohibits news websites (or any Twitter account holders) from posting the same news article on multiple Twitter accounts. For example, the main Twitter account for Arlingtoncardinal.com is @earlyreport, which posts all articles from Arlingtoncardinal.com (local, US and World news articles). Another Twitter account, @Arlingtoncards, formerly posted only Arlingtoncardinal.com […]
Read the full story
Posted in Digital-Lifestyle
Tag result for article published on Thu July 13 2017 10:12 pm. CLICK TITLE TO EXPAND.Tags: abusive power, anti-competitive behavior, business abuse, Clayton Act 1914, Competition Law, consumer protection, consumers, Facebook, Facebook jail, Facebook power, Facebook restrictions, Facebook suspension, fair practice, Federal Trade Commision, Federal Trade Commission Act 1914, First Amendment, Forbes, freedom of speech, FTC, infrastructure, monopoly, monopoly power, power, Sherman Act 1890, social media
Facebook on July 13, 2017 (today) has released a punishing block of our shared links on our official Facebook page (Facebook.com/ArlingtonCardinal). According to Facebook, the block was scheduled to be released on July 26, 2017 at 5:50 a.m. About 5:50 a.m. on the morning of June 26, 2017, Facebook notified the official page for The […]
Read the full story
Posted in 24/7 Crime Alerts!, 24/7 Fire Rescue!, Digital-Lifestyle
Tag result for article published on Wed June 28 2017 1:47 pm. CLICK TITLE TO EXPAND.Tags: abusive power, anti-competitive behavior, business abuse, Clayton Act 1914, Competition Law, consumer protection, consumers, Facebook, Facebook power, fair practice, Federal Trade Commision, Federal Trade Commission Act 1914, Forbes, FTC, infrastructure, monopoly, monopoly power, power, Sherman Act 1890
When Facebook behaves badly, it is more likely to face an increasing amount of scrutiny from the Federal Trade Commision. When a business gets big, it can also trigger government antitrust scrutiny even without any evidence of bad conduct. This week Facebook got big. It reached 2 billion members in its worldwide community. Although not […]
Read the full story
Posted in Biz