Twitter Will Now Age-Screen Users Willing To Follow Alcohol Brands

Twitter Will Now Age Screen Users Willing To Follow Alcohol Brands

Twitter today announced that it has implemented a new age-screening system for users who are willing to follow alcohol brands. Seeing as it is a global social network, and the legal drinking age varies in different countries, Twitter will now ask users to confirm their date of birth when they follow such a brand. The microblogging network will then check if they’re of or over the legal drinking age in their country, if they are, their follow request will be approved and if they aren’t, the follow will be denied.

The age-screening feature has been rolled out on twitter.com, and on its iOS and Android apps. Users will be asked to punch in their date of birth once they tap or click on the follow button of an alcohol brand’s Twitter profile. Once age is provided, Twitter checks if the user is of the legal drinking age in their country. When the age-screening test is passed, Twitter confirms the follower status and also remembers that the user’s account met the age requirement without actually storing the date of birth. As previously mentioned, those who don’t meet the required age, will have their follow request denied. Twitter has initially partnered with brands like Bud Light, Jim Beam, Knob Creek, Bacardi and Heineken. Even if the addition of an age-gate is a nice step to ensure that users under the legal age of drinking in their country don’t follow these brands, its not like people almost always haven’t lied about their age on the internet.

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  • Twitter Will Now Age-Screen Users Willing To Follow Alcohol Brands original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Time Magazine’s 50 Best Websites of 2007

    This article was written on July 11, 2007 by CyberNet.

    I always love the “Best Website” lists because there’s usually a handful of sites that I haven’t heard of, or paid much attention to. Time magazine has put together their list of the 50 Best Websites of 2007. They explain it as their picks of “what’s new and exciting about the Web right now.”

    You can get involved by taking their poll and ranking each of the sites on a scale of 1 to 100. After you’ve given the site a rating, it will display the average rating that it has received.

    Ratingscale

    Top 5 Best Websites

    1. Weebly.com (our coverage here)
    2. Chow.com
    3. Blinkx.com
    4. OhDon’tForget.com
    5. StumbleUpon.com (our coverage here)

    While I haven’t heard of some of the listed sites, there are several well-known sites that we’ve covered like:

    You can view the entire list of 50 websites here. Are there any that you don’t think belong on the list? On the other hand, is there a site that you think belongs? Let us know in the comments!

    Oh, and just in case you’re interested, there’s also the Time Magazine’s list of the 5 Worst Websites. That list included e-Harmony, Evite, Meez, MySpace (no surprise here!), and SecondLife.

    Source: Thanks XPGeek!

    Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com

    Killing the Fail Whale With Twitter’s Christopher Fry

    Killing the Fail Whale With Twitter’s Christopher Fry

    WIRED sits down with Twitter’s SVP of Engineering to talk about how the service will continue to grow, what keeps him up at night, and to find out whatever happened to the Fail Whale.

        



    Twitter posts pull in a king’s ransom in copyright damages for photojournalist

    Freelance photojournalist Daniel Morel was awarded $1.2 million yesterday when a US federal jury found two large media companies guilty of copyright infringement. Agence France-Presse and Getty Images had swiped his photographs of the 2010 Haiti earthquake and distributed them to news outlets around the world. Guess where they swiped them from! Morel was present […]

    Twitter unveils forward secrecy in bid to stymie spying government eyes

    As with many tech companies, Twitter has been caught up in the government spying fallout, and has taken steps to protect its users’ data, the latest of which was an announcement on the company’s blog this evening: forward secrecy. With forward secrecy, Twitter has essentially enabled a contingency plan against the possibility of some agency […]

    Twitter’s new encryption could prevent governments from snooping on old tweets

    Padlock

    Internet services can toughen their security to mitigate government surveillance, but that won’t do much to lock down information that’s already in snoops’ hands. Twitter hopes to prevent those raids on past data through its recent implementation of Perfect Forward Secrecy, an encryption technique that stops intruders from decoding traffic on a grand scale. Each communication session has a random encryption key that never travels across networks; even if spies get full access to Twitter’s archives, they’ll have to crack any PFS-protected chats one at a time. The new policy won’t stop determined government agents from reading your tweets, but it will make them work harder for anything they want.

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    Source: Twitter Blog

    Twitter’s added an extra layer of encryption in part to make it tougher for the government to spy on

    Twitter’s added an extra layer of encryption in part to make it tougher for the government to spy on users. The service will now use Perfect Forward Security just like Google, Mozilla and Facebook which creates unique encryption keys for each session.

    Read more…


        



    Potluck’s new iPhone app encourages you to chat about the daily news

    The world needs more social networks like it needs more politicians. Then again, we’ve got some time for Potluck, if only because the service is financially backed by Ev Williams and Biz Stone — two guys who have form when it comes to spotting a good idea. Potluck’s iOS app, which has just benefited from a major overhaul, throws curated news stories at you one by one. Then it asks you to tap “yay” or “nay” depending on whether you find the topic enticing — a bit like the way Tinder works, but applied to headlines instead of scary faces. If a particular story sparks your imagination and urge to banter, the app connects you with friends who’ve read the same article so that you can right the world’s wrongs together. Or, you know, find even nastier things to say about poor old Miley Cyrus.

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    Source: Potluck

    Vine expands its reach internationally with support for more languages

    Twitter’s six-second video sharing app Vine is making a play for more markets, announcing today that its apps for iOS and Android have been translated into 19 new languages, plus two more just on Android. Also available on Windows Phone and sporting a user base of over 40 million, a blog post also mentions Vine is working on ways to highlight popular clips on a country-by-country basis. Many of the Vine’s we’ve seen work in any language, but we suppose opening up access to the app to more people will only increase the creativity seen. Now, who can translate “Ooooh, kill ’em” into Polish?

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    Social Media Experiment Proves How Easy It Is To Find Out Things About A Total Stranger

    When we tweet, update our status, or post a photo onto Instagram, we don’t really think too much about it. In fact it seems that despite all outcries of invasion of privacy from the government, we are all too willing to share where we are, what we are doing, what we are thinking, and how we look like with complete strangers on the internet. It seems innocent enough, at least until Jack Vale decided to pull a prank on strangers by acting like he knew them, such as their names, how they look like, and when their birthdays are simply based on tweets and Instagram posts that are the closest around him.

    The result was a little creepy and highlights how much of ourselves we put out there without thinking twice about it. Not to mention anyone could pull our information at any given time, and yet we don’t seem too fussed about it. I personally am not sure how I would react if someone came up to me and started telling me things about myself, but for the most part the people in the video seem to have taken it in good stride. What do you guys think? Makes you think, doesn’t it?

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  • Social Media Experiment Proves How Easy It Is To Find Out Things About A Total Stranger original content from Ubergizmo.