Posted: April 21st, 2010 | Author: Richard | Filed under: Internet | Tags: Internet | No Comments »

Facebook Lite, a basic version of the popular social-networking website for people with poor internet connections, has shut down.
Initially launched in September 2009, Facebook Lite targeted people with poor connectivity and only offered basic functions.
Sophy Silver from Facebook told Web User: “Thanks to everyone who tried out Facebook Lite. We’re no longer supporting it, but learned a lot from the test of a slimmed-down site.”
The company were reluctant to give any further information on the closure.
Those endeared to Facebook Lite have made their disappointment public on Lite’s page, with one such supporter claiming ”It was the first good thing Facebook’s done in over a year.”
Facebook accounted for 6.22 per cent of visits to all websites from UK users during the last week of March, according to web-monitoring company Hitwise.
Posted: August 10th, 2009 | Author: Richard | Filed under: Internet, Internet Restriction, Web Monitoring | Tags: Block websites, Control, Internet, Internet Restriction, Restriction, Social Networking, Web Monitoring | No Comments »

It is increasingly important for companies to effectively communicate their web at work policy to everyone in the organisation to ensure safe and productive browsing and to avoid confusion.
Firms have generally become more relaxed about the personal use of IT at work, as the costs of supplying internet and PCs have come down. They should be reasonable in setting rules and communicate them effectively to employees, Netsafe executive director Martin Cocker says.
“Many companies are saying, `Yes, you can use Trade Me, but only in your lunch break’.”
However, Sarah Trotman, managing director of business network Bizzone, says businesses have become stricter about employees using social networking sites at work.
Firms are often finding that employees are “twittering” or blogging on behalf of the business without their knowledge, and employees are often more clued up about social networking sites and the web than business owners.
“It has become more challenging to control the amount of information going out about their own business.”
Mr Cocker says surveys have shown small and medium-sized businesses often have incomplete IT policies and security.
This was highlighted by the Safe Air email controversy. An employee at the Woodbourne aviation engineering firm was dismissed for sending 425 lewd emails at work over a six-month period, but the Employment Relations Authority ordered Safe Air to reinstate the worker, since he was unclear about acceptable standards for IT use.
Posted: July 27th, 2009 | Author: Richard | Filed under: Internet, Internet Restriction, Web Monitoring | Tags: Block websites, Control, Internet, Internet Restriction, Social Networking, Web Monitoring | 4 Comments »

Facebook at work amounts to social “not-working”, according to a new survey that shows employee productivity is hit by people socialising on the internet during office hours.
A new study by Boston IT advisory firm, Nucleus Research found that, companies that allow users to access Facebook in the workplace lose an average 1.5% in total worker productivity.
Nearly half of employees in the recent social net-working study use Facebook during work hours some as much as two hours per day. The average worker uses it for 15 minutes a day, and most couldn’t come up with a legitimate “business reason” for logging on.
The survey of 237 employees also showed that 77% of workers who have a Facebook account use it during work hours. And “some” employees use the social networking site as much as two hours a day at work, the study found.
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Posted: July 23rd, 2009 | Author: Richard | Filed under: Internet, Internet Restriction | Tags: Block websites, Control, Internet, Internet Restriction | No Comments »

A recent study named “The Cost of Social Notworking”, examined specific details about how office workers use the immensely popular Facebook. And it reveals that some 77% of those workers surveyed had an account. Of those people, 66% accessed their profiles while at work, with some 6% exclusively doing so while on company time. That should raise alarm bells in many an employer’s minds, particularly when you learn that 87% of Facebook-using employees can’t come up with a legitimate work-related reason for visiting the site, and the average access time is 15 minutes. For a small company of 200 workers that fifteen minutes multiplies up to 50 working hours (one whole man week) lost to Facebook each and every day.
The knock-on effects on revenue loss are incalculable because they vary with the workload of each employee and the fact that the business model is different for every company. Although difficult to accurately measure, off these figures the money lost throughout the US and Europe concerned is likely to tally up to billions of lost dollars per day.
Some might say that in the current financial climate, Facebook could well be portrayed as The Great Downturn Facilitator.
Others see Facebook in an entirely different light altogether, and take the view that Facebook actually contributes to increasing their staff’s office productivity. After all, accessing Facebook is all about learning what your friends are up to and playing casual games: Both of these could be viewed as bolstering an office worker’s cheerfulness levels and thus resulting in a more positive working environment.
What do you think?
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Posted: July 16th, 2009 | Author: Sai | Filed under: Government, Internet Restriction, Web Monitoring | Tags: Access, Block websites, Control, Government, Internet, Restriction | No Comments »

An Internet filter on the Parliament IT system blocks access to websites that contain “offensive or illegal content or are sources of malicious software”.
The policy emerged after an MP was unable to access the Daily Sport site.
“Because of the things they are trying to censor they may have made an assumption about this particular website,” said Lembit Opik, MP.
Guidance issued to all MPs in December 2007 warns that they have a duty to ensure the Parliamentary network is used properly “by themselves and their staff” and to avoid actions that “threaten the integrity of the system or bring it into disrepute”.
The aim is to protect security but also to “help to prevent users of the network from being exposed to inappropriate material”.
The web filtering system also “collects data related to user activity, including user names and all websites visited whether blocked or not and will be retained for a period of 12 months”, it adds.
MPs who try to access sites deemed inappropriate are presented with a screen asking them to contact the Commons authorities for permission to view the material.
Those who break the rules face being disconnected from the system by the Serjeant-at-Arms.
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