NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Facebook's scandals and outage test users' frenemy relationship

  • Written by Elizabeth Stoycheff, Associate Professor of Communication, Wayne State University
imageHow do you feel about Facebook?Enes Evren/E+ via Getty Images

When Facebook was down for most of the day on Oct. 4, 2021, did you miss it, were you relieved or some of both? Social scientists have compiled an expansive body of research that shows how people have come to develop a love-hate relationship with the social media giant with nearly 3...

Read more: Facebook's scandals and outage test users' frenemy relationship

More Articles ...

  1. Is social distancing unraveling the bonds that keep society together?
  2. Becoming a parent through surrogacy can have ethical challenges – but it is a positive experience for some
  3. As American independence rang, a sweeping lockdown and mass inoculations fought off a smallpox outbreak
  4. 4 trends in public school enrollment due to COVID-19
  5. Winners of 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics built mathematics of climate modeling, making predictions of global warming and modern weather forecasting possible
  6. The 2021 Nobel Prize for medicine helps unravel mysteries about how the body senses temperature and pressure
  7. What's in the Pandora Papers? And why does South Dakota feature so heavily?
  8. The Pandora Papers: why does South Dakota feature so heavily?
  9. Why improvisation is the future in an AI-dominated world
  10. How Theranos' faulty blood tests got to market – and what that shows about gaps in FDA regulation
  11. Century-old racist US Supreme Court cases still rule over millions of Americans
  12. California's latest offshore oil spill could fuel pressure to end oil production statewide
  13. Police killings of civilians in the US have been undercounted by more than half in official statistics
  14. The brutal trade in enslaved people within the US has been largely whitewashed out of history
  15. Why prescription drugs can work differently for different people
  16. Dangerous urban heat exposure has tripled since the 1980s, with the poor most at risk
  17. In cities, dangerous heat exposure has tripled since the 1980s, with the poor most at risk
  18. Puerto Rico has a once-in-a-lifetime chance to build a clean energy grid – but FEMA plans to spend $9.4 billion on fossil fuel infrastructure instead
  19. Cherry-picking the Bible and using verses out of context isn't a practice confined to those opposed to vaccines – it has been done for centuries
  20. How did white students respond to school integration after Brown v. Board of Education?
  21. How education reforms can support teachers around the world instead of undermining them
  22. Five years after largest marine heatwave on record hit northern California coast, many warm–water species have stuck around
  23. Why some college sports are often out of reach for students from low-income families
  24. Tylenol could be risky for pregnant women – a new review of 25 years of research finds acetaminophen may contribute to ADHD and other developmental disorders in children
  25. Britney’s conservatorship is one example of how the legacy of eugenics in the US continues to affect the lives of disabled women
  26. David Chase might hate that 'The Many Saints of Newark' is premiering on HBO Max – but it's the wave of the future
  27. Monsoons make deserts bloom in the US Southwest, but climate change is making these summer rainfalls more extreme and erratic
  28. To swim like a tuna, robotic fish need to change how stiff their tails are in real time
  29. Americans are in a mental health crisis – especially African Americans. Can churches help?
  30. A major new workplace safety initiative targets dangerous heat on the job, but what about chronic heat exposure?
  31. A major federal response to occupational extreme heat is here at last
  32. Britney Spears gets free of father's conservatorship – but many others remain shackled by the easily abused legal arrangement
  33. US Supreme Court gets set to address abortion, guns and religion
  34. Havana syndrome fits the pattern of psychosomatic illness – but that doesn't mean the symptoms aren't real
  35. As heat waves intensify, tens of thousands of US classrooms will be too hot for students to learn in
  36. 50 years ago, the first CT scan let doctors see inside a living skull – thanks to an eccentric engineer at the Beatles' record company
  37. Why charter schools are not as 'public' as they claim to be
  38. Who pays and who benefits from a massive expansion of solar power?
  39. What happened during the last government shutdown: 4 essential reads
  40. SNAP benefits are rising for millions of Americans, thanks to a long-overdue 'Thrifty Food Plan' update
  41. The music of proteins is made audible through a computer program that learns from Chopin
  42. Combining an HIV vaccine with immunotherapy may reduce the need for daily medication
  43. Facebook sabe que Instagram está dañando la mente de los adolescentes... y decide callar
  44. Ancient Americans made art deep within the dark zones of caves throughout the Southeast
  45. Avoiding water bankruptcy in the drought-troubled Southwest: What the US and Iran can learn from each other
  46. An autonomous robot may have already killed people – here's how the weapons could be more destabilizing than nukes
  47. New NCAA endorsement rules could benefit women more than men
  48. Francis Scott Key: One of the anti-slavery movement's great villains
  49. Walt Disney's radical vision for a new kind of city
  50. Why Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg may be in hot water with the SEC