Did Anthony Weiner Tweet a Picture of His Weiner?


Did liberal hero and would-be Mayor of New York Rep. Anthony Weiner (D - N.Y.) Tweet a picture of his own, underwear-clad erection last night? Conservative bloggers sure seem to hope so!

The pic, according to BigGovernment.com writer "Publius", was posted last night to Weiner's official account on yFrog, the Twitter picture service, and sent out on his Twitter feed. It was apparently quickly deleted, but not before Publius grabbed what he says is a screenshot of the yFrog page. (The original Tweet still exists on archiving site Tweet Congress.)

Did Anthony Weiner Tweet a Picture of His Weiner?Weiner (pictured above with his wife, Huma Abedin, and the only other man in Congress whose name would make a sex scandal twice as fun) quickly Tweeted that his Facebook was hacked, which — even though the picture was, as far as we can tell, not posted to Facebook — seems to be a reference to the dickshot Tweet; today, he Tweeted "Touche Prof Moriarity. More Weiner Jokes for all my guests!#Hacked!" Stranger things have happened, we suppose!

But conservative bloggers are positive that the picture is evidence that Weiner is having an affair, and doing their best to track down the woman to whom the Tweet was addressed — they seem to think she's a journalism student in Seattle who once referred to Weiner as "her boyfriend" on Twitter. (Needless to say, many men and women refer to Anthony Weiner as their boyfriend. Aspirationally, we suppose.) She's since deleted her Twitter, and what's purported to be her Facebook account, maybe because she was exposed as Weiner's mistress, or maybe because she or a friend was responsible for the hack.

Of course, all caveats regarding Andrew Breitbart's accuracy-challenged BigGovernmentapply — but Weiner seems to be acknowledging that the pic was posted, even if it was a hack, as he claims.

[BigGovernment.com]

Why Swiss Women Can’t Work After Winning Votes to Lead Nation

Switzerland’s Justice Minister Simonetta Sommaruga

The election in October of Simonetta Sommaruga, a trained concert pianist who is now Justice Minister, was a watershed as women for the first time held more cabinet posts than men. Photographer: Georges Gobets/AFP/Getty Images

(Bloomberg).....Since women won the right to vote in the canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden in 1990, females have risen to rule Switzerland’s politics, making up four of the seven- member cabinet. Combining a career and motherhood in the Alpine nation presents a steeper climb.

Parents can end up spending almost a third of their wages on childcare, with Zurich nursery schools charging as much as 1,500 francs ($1,700) a month. Those costs, coupled with poor maternity benefits, banish many mothers to the home, said Clivia Koch, the former chief executive of an 8 billion-franc pension fund who now heads the non-profit Swiss Business Women group.

A second revolution is needed in the workplace to ensure more businesswomen emulate people like Panalpina Welttransport Holding AG (PWTN) Chief Executive Officer Monika Ribar and Isabelle Welton, International Business Machines Corp.’s general manager in Switzerland, Koch said. Less than 10 percent of Swiss families with children aged up to 14 years have both parents who work full-time, compared with more than 70 percent in the U.S., the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said.

“The first women who wanted freedom to choose their career path, the fighters, the pioneers, had to do it through politics, there was no other way,” said Koch, 53, in an interview at her organization’s Zurich headquarters. “Now we need fighters in business too.”

Of Swiss directors, 8.3 percent are women, down from 9 percent in 2004, management recruitment company Egon Zehnder’s most recent annual figures show. About 37 percent of Swiss couples with no children have both partners working full time. This drops to 8.7 percent after they have children, according to government figures.

Watershed Election

The election in October of Simonetta Sommaruga, a trained concert pianist who is now Justice Minister, was a watershed as women for the first time held more cabinet posts than men. It came almost four decades after the first Swiss women were permitted to vote in 1971.

Voting rights for Swiss women came 54 years after females in the former Soviet Union won the right to vote. All women in the U.S. were first permitted to cast a ballot in 1920.

Energy Minister Doris Leuthard, who was Swiss President in 2010, remembers her mother’s joy when female suffrage finally arrived in her country.

“She had given up her professional life when she got married,” she said in an interview. “For her, political rights were a form of recognition and vital for her self-esteem.”

Female Parliamentarians

Early female leaders like Josi Meier and Elisabeth Blunschy, among Switzerland’s first female parliamentarians, “were a great influence on me,” Leuthard said. “They influenced and encouraged many other women to become more active themselves.”

In the world’s fourth-richest nation, according to the International Monetary Fund, child care can cost parents 30 percent of their net income, the second-highest rate in the developed world behind the U.K., data from the OECD show. That compares with a global OECD average of 13 percent, and 19 percent in the U.S. and 4 percent in Belgium.

Switzerland didn’t introduce paid maternity leave until 2005, awarding mothers 14 weeks. Norwegian and German women are entitled to 47 weeks.

“We’re too rich,” Koch said. “There has never been a great necessity for women to work. We have to reassess our social security systems. In other countries, there is much better child care and society is more open to women pursuing a career.”

Population Decline

Swiss women have an average 1.33 children, government statistics show. That compares with 2 in France, Norway and the U.S., and a global average of 2.5, according to the Population Reference Bureau’s latest figures.

One third of over-45 year-old Swiss men and women say they would have liked more children, according to a recent poll for the L’Hebdo magazine. Sixty-six percent see women’s employment conditions as a brake on parenthood and 38 percent cite the lack of childcare as holding back the birth rate, the survey showed.

“The price we’re paying is population decline,” said sociologist Franz Schultheis, a professor at the University of St. Gallen. “It sounds paradoxical, but countries where more women work and state childcare is better actually have a higher birth rate.”

The Federal Commission for Family Affairs, a government body, proposed an initiative to extend maternity leave from 14 to at least 24 weeks, including for the first time an option for fathers to take four of those weeks.

A parliamentary vote won’t come for another year or two, said Juerg Krummenacher, the commission’s president.

Unique History

“We have to do more in Switzerland to combine family and career,” said Sommaruga. “I hope in my office I can contribute to that.”

The men of Appenzell Innerrhoden, whose chalets and cheese- making are among the country’s biggest tourist attractions, clung on until 1990 before a Supreme Court ruling forced them to let their female counterparts go to the polls.

One reason why Switzerland lags so far behind other nations when it comes to equality and women’s rights is its unique history and geography, said Dominique Grisard, a gender studies expert at the universities of Basel and Chicago.

With its natural mountain defenses, the country hasn’t faced a foreign invader since Napoleon, while neutrality in two world wars let the Swiss escape the “ruptures” that brought the rest of Europe’s women into factories to replace men drafted onto the battlefield, Grisard said.

‘Status Symbol’

When peace returned to the continent in 1945, Swiss governments preferred to fill a prospering jobs market with labor migrants, mostly from Italy, rather than encourage Swiss women to work, said Fabienne Amlinger, a historian at the University of Bern.

“In the 1950s, working men could increasingly afford to keep their wives at home,” Grisard said. “It became a status symbol.”

With a lower chamber in Parliament that is 19 percent female, Switzerland ranks 25th in the Inter-Parliamentary Union’s rankings, between Trinidad and Tobago and Timor-Leste.

“There’s still a long way to go,” said Leuthard.

To contact the reporter on this story: Leigh Baldwin in Zurich at lbaldwin3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Angela Cullen at acullen8@bloomberg.net.

Muriel Nude Beach

Muriel Nude Beach

Video: 'Glee' Star Heather Morris Shows Off Her Smokin' Dance Moves



Heather Morris is best known for the odd one-liners her character Brittany recites on 'Glee,' but her first passion is dance and she's pretty freaking good at it. Morris shows off some of her smokin' hot moves for Esquire's '50 Songs Every Man Should Be Listening To.'

Morris, clad in a skin-tight, partially sheer leotard, shakes her groove thing to the likes of 'Heart Attack' by Raphael Saadiq, 'Rock N Roll' by Raekwon and 'Sofi Needs a Ladder' by Deadmaus in a seductive rock 'n' roll shoot that's a far cry from her days as a cheerleader.

What many may not know is that Morris was never supposed to be part of the 'Glee' cast. A dancer since she could walk, Morris served as a 'Single Ladies' backup dancer for Beyonce and the show's producers brought her her in to teach the cast the signature dance in 2009.
Those running the show obviously liked what they saw, and Morris has been entertaining viewers with her dance moves and one-liners on the small screen ever since.

Source: popeater.com

Facebook a top cause of relationship trouble, say US lawyers



Social networking site becoming primary source of evidence in divorce proceedings and custody battles, lawyers say

Facebook

Photographs taken from social networking sites are a rich source of evidence, divorce lawyers say. Photograph: Chris Jackson/Getty Images

When Facebook gets involved, relationships can quickly fall apart – as Hosni Mubarak and Muammar Gaddafi have discovered. But dictatorships are not the only ties being dissolved by social networking sites: now Facebook is increasingly being blamed for undermining American marriages.

Even though the rate of divorce in the US has remained largely stable in recent years, American divorce lawyers and academics have joined Middle East analysts in picking out Facebook as a leading cause of relationship trouble, with American lawyers now demanding to see their clients' Facebook pages as a matter of course before the start of proceedings.

"We're coming across it more and more. One spouse connects online with someone they knew from school. The person is emotionally available and they start communicating through Facebook," said Dr Steven Kimmons, a clinical psychologist and marriage counsellor at Loyola University Medical Centre near Chicago.

Yet while the US media has been quick to trumpet any evidence of Facebook as the country's leading marriage-wrecker, the truth is "It's complicated," as the site's relationship status would have it.

A 2010 survey by the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers (AAML) found that four out of five lawyers reported an increasing number of divorce cases citing evidence derived from social networking sites in the past five years, with Facebook being the market leader.

Two-thirds of the lawyers surveyed said that Facebook was the "primary source" of evidence in divorce proceedings, while MySpace with 15% and Twitter with 5% lagged far behind.

Those statistics included not just evidence of infidelity but other legal battles, such as child custody cases in which parents deny using illicit drugs but boast of smoking marijuana on their Facebook pages.

Photographs harvested from social networking sites – including those posted by friends or colleagues on their own pages – are a particularly rich source of damning evidence, according to divorce lawyers.

"This sort of evidence has gone from nothing to a large percentage of my cases coming in," Linda Lea Vicken, a member of the divorce lawyers' group from South Dakota, told the Associated Press.

Marlene Eskind Moses, president of the AAML, said the openness and sharing of social networking sites left their users' public and private lives more exposed.

"If you publicly post any contradictions to previously made statements and promises, an estranged spouse will certainly be one of the first people to notice and make use of that evidence," said Moses.

Statistics for January from online analysts Nielsen showed 135 million people in the US visiting Facebook during the month – nearly 70% of the country's internet users. On average, users spent more than seven hours a month visiting the site, far longer than the less than half an hour spent on visits to Amazon or the average of two hours and 15 minutes on Google, America's most popular web destination.

The overall rate of divorce, however, appears to be unaffected by the advent of social networking. The most recent published data – from 2009 – shows the overall divorce rate declining, slightly more slowly than the shrinking percentage of Americans who get married every year.

A spokesperson for Facebook said: "It's ridiculous to suggest that Facebook leads to divorce. Whether you're breaking up or just getting together, Facebook is just a way to communicate, like letters, phone calls and emails. Facebook doesn't cause divorces, people do."

But given its popularity, it is little wonder that negotiating "Facebook divorce" status updates has become another unhappy event for failed romances, over when to launch the site's broken-heart icon out into the glare of the world's news feed.


Irreconcilable Claim: Facebook Causes 1 in 5 Divorces

Upon further review, Facebook and marriage aren't incompatible.

In the past two weeks, the idea that the popular social-networking site plays a role in one in five divorces was reported by many news organizations. This wasn't the first time that surprising number has surfaced—it has appeared in news reports periodically for the past year and a half.

Some lawyers do say that they see Facebook and other social media playing a role in divorce these days, as people rediscover old flames online or strike up new relationships that lead them to stray from their marriage vows. But lawyers and marriage researchers say there isn't much evidence to support the notion that social-networking sites actually cause marriages to sputter.


In fact, both the marriage and divorce rate in the U.S. have declined as Internet usage has risen, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics. An annual survey of U.K. matrimonial lawyers by the accounting and consulting firm Grant Thornton has found that during the Facebook era, infidelity's role as the primary cause of around one-quarter of divorces has been stable. In an email, a Facebook spokesman called the notion that the site leads to divorce "ludicrous."

Yet the 1-in-5 number has thrived in part because it helps fill a vacuum: There isn't much reliable research about what does cause divorce. Academic researchers don't even agree on how to approach the question. Some have searched for predictive demographic factors, such as age and income. Others have studied married couples' relationships to see which characteristics presage a split. Determining whether a couple is likely to break up, though, is different than identifying the actual cause.

Only a few studies have surveyed divorcees directly at the time of their divorce. One by two Pennsylvania State University researchers used as its data source 2,033 married people who had agreed to be tracked in 1980. By 1997, barely half were still reachable and amenable to interviews; of those, about one in five had gotten divorced and would discuss it. That left 208 people to be studied, a relatively small sample. And the rates of reported reasons differed between men and women. Some 9% of women ascribed their divorce to mental or physical abuse, while no men did; conversely, 9% of men said they didn't know the cause, while none of the women said this.

Even numbers on overall U.S. divorce rates are spotty. NCHS reclassified its divorce statistics as "provisional" in 1996, reflecting budgetary constraints at the agency that hampered data collection and the lack of reporting from California and a few other states that stopped tracking divorce. The figures for 2009, for example, exclude California and five other states that together contain 21% of the U.S. population.

In 2008 the Census Bureau began asking Americans in an annual survey whether they have been divorced in the last year, which is allowing researchers to start filling in gaps in state data. But so far there aren't enough data to identify trends.

"To do this kind of research requires a huge amount of persistence," says George Levinger, professor emeritus of psychology at the University of Massachusetts.

Still, the widespread circulation of the supposed Facebook divorce link shows how a catchy number can take on a life of its own.

The 1-in-5 number originated with an executive at an online divorce-service provider in the U.K. Mark Keenan, managing director of Divorce-Online, which allows Britons to file uncontested divorces at low cost, had just launched the company's Facebook page and wondered what role Facebook has in precipitating divorces. After determining that the word "Facebook" appeared in 989 of the company's 5,000 or so most recent divorce petitions, he had Divorce-Online issue a news release in December 2009 stating "Facebook is bad for your marriage."

Mr. Keenan acknowledges that his company's clients aren't necessarily representative of all divorces, and he adds that his firm never claimed that Facebook actually causes 20% of divorces. "It was a very unscientific survey," Mr. Keenan says.

A few months later, the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers announced results of a survey of its 1,600 members, 81% of whom said they had seen an increase in cases using social-networking "evidence" in the last five years. These results weren't surprising, given Facebook's phenomenal growth. But the survey drew widespread coverage that often resuscitated the 1-in-5 divorce figure.

The confusion crested last week when Perry Drake, senior manager of media relations for Loyola University Health System in Chicago, put together a news release touting a Loyola psychologist's expertise on relationships and social media. Finding the 1-in-5 figure online, Mr. Drake led the news release with the headline: "Don't let your marriage be among the 1 in 5 destroyed by Facebook." By the time Mr. Drake became aware of the error and alerted the news release's recipients, news articles had appeared around the world.

"A little sloppiness on my part has made for a bad two weeks," says Mr. Drake.

Write to Carl Bialik at numbersguy@wsj.com

Women who post lots of photos of themselves on Facebook value appearance, need attention, study finds


Putting more photos of yourself on Facebook translates to valuing physical appearance.

Putting more photos of yourself on Facebook translates to valuing physical appearance. (Dan Kitwood / Getty Images)

By Shari Roan, Los Angeles Times

March 10, 2011


Are you so awesome you'd friend yourself? Facebook found to be a great esteem builder

March 03, 2011|By Karen Kaplan, Los Angeles Times

March 03, 2011|By Karen Kaplan, Los Angeles Times

Need a pick-me-up? Try updating your Facebook profile.

Spending just a few minutes on the social networking site can enhance your self-esteem, according to a new study from a journal called Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking. (Yes, that’s a real academic journal.)

According to a leading theory from social psychology (objective self-awareness), exposure to mirrors, photos and recordings of one’s voice encourages people to view themselves the way others see them. This, in turn, is thought to promote “pro-social behavior” and diminish one’s self-esteem.

However, another prominent theory (the hyperpersonal model) among those who study online communication holds that when people have the opportunity to put their best face forward online – by posting flattering photos and emphasizing certain aspects of their personality – they can give their self-esteem a boost.

RELATED: Facebook profile reflects the true you

To test what happens in the real world, psychologists from Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., gave a 10-item self-esteem test to 63 undergrads, divided into three groups. One group took the test after spending 3 minutes on Facebook, another group took the test while able to view themselves in a mirror and a control group had no exposure to anything that would evoke self-awareness.

Using a statistical test, the researchers showed that the Facebook students had greater self-esteem than students in the other two groups. And it wasn’t just a fluke, they wrote. The students who looked at their own profiles for the entire 3 minutes had higher self-esteem than students who spent some of that time clicking around on other people’s Facebook pages. In addition, students who made changes to their Facebook profiles also had higher self-esteem than students who didn’t. Both of those observations support the hyperpersonal model, the authors wrote.

“By allowing people to present preferred or positive information” about themselves, Facebook allows people to ehance their awareness of the optimal self,” the researchers concluded. Some of the self-esteem boost may also be traced to being reminded of how many “friends” one has, they added.

You can read the full study here.


First Valentine: Lasting legacy of 500-year-old love


Love it or hate it, even the most hardened anti-Romeo will be hard pressed to avoid Valentine's Day this year. But as an exhibit at the British Library currently on show is testament to, there is a first for everything - even on Valentine's Day.

It is a letter, written from a young woman to her love, and is the first mention of the word Valentine in the English language. And, for the first time, the descendants of Margery Brews and her betrothed John Paston have been traced.

Start Quote

The letter shows they were no different to us. They had the same loves, desires and financial problems”

End Quote Julian Harrison British Library curator

In 1477 Margery wrote a letter to her John pleading with him not to give her up, despite her parents' refusal to increase her dowry.

Addressing her "ryght welebeloued Voluntyne" (right well-beloved Valentine), she promised to be a good wife, adding: "Yf that ye loffe me as Itryste verely that ye do ye will not leffe me" (If you love me, I trust.. you will not leave me).

Her beloved might have had his mind on business, driving a hard bargain for her hand in marriage, but Margery still had her sights on romance, and so secured her place in English history.

"It might not necessarily be that nobody had used Valentine in any context before, but this is probably one of the first times it was written down," says British Library curator Julian Harrison.

And for Cambridge historian, Dr Helen Castor, the importance of Margery Brews' letter and the light it sheds on relationships at that time is hugely important.

"One of the wonderful things about this particular letter is that it is so private," she said.

"It gives a real sense of the relationship between a young man and young woman wanting to marry.

"Without this letter we wouldn't know that this was a love match," she said.

(l to r) Keith Edwards, Rob Edwards, Mary Edwards, Richard Buckworth-Herne-Soame, Sir Charles Buckworth-Herne-Soame, Lady Eileen Buckworth-Herne-Soame The family, from Coalbrook Dale, Shropshire, had no idea of their link to the Norfolk Pastons

While romantics 534 years later might celebrate Valentine's Day with fine dining, chocolates and flowers, Margery is left pleading with her love not to leave her while pledging her heart over all "earthly things".

She promises her undying love: "Myne herte me bydds ever more to love yowe truly" (My heart me bids ever more to love you truly), and speaks of her ailing body and heart over her fiance's continuing silence.

However, modern-day lovers be reassured, like any self-respecting fairytale romance the heart did (finally) rule the head and, despite her father's stubbornness over her dowry, Margery did marry her knight.

The couple had a son, William, in 1479. Margery died in 1495, John in 1503.

The Pastons and their letters

Written between 1422-1509, the personal letters between the Norfolk family are the oldest record of private correspondence that survive in Britain.

The bulk are in the British Library, others are in the Bodleian Library, Oxford and the Norfolk Record Office.

The letters offer a unique insight into a medieval family on the make - one that rose from peasantry to aristocracy in just two generations.

They show first-hand testimony of the social benefits the plague brought to the peasantry, the chaotic effects of the Wars of the Roses on the general populace and the individual impact that the Black Death could have on a family.

The family died out with William Paston, Second Earl of Yarmouth, in 1732. His wife Charlotte was an illegitimate daughter of Charles II.

Their 16th and 17th generation descendants - by way of a king's illegitimate offspring - were traced via the website myheritage.

Living in Shropshire and until then unaware of their genetic link to a Valentine milestone, Sir Charles Buckworth-Herne-Soame, his wife Lady Eileen, their son Richard, his sister Mary Edwards, husband Keith and son Rob recently saw the missive for the first time.

For historians, the Paston Letters have long been a fascinating insight into the soap opera lives of gentry in the Middle Ages.

Most documentation which survives from medieval times are legal and governmental records, financial accounts and property deeds. Few personal letters exist and even fewer are written by women.

The archive of more than 1,000 letters - most in the British Library - is written by three generations of the Norfolk landowning-family over a period of 70 years.

Family fall-outs, parents nagging, clashes with the aristocracy and parties while mother's away are all detailed.

But Margery's letter, as the first English Valentine, has added significance for scholars and is currently part of a British Library exhibition on the evolution of the English language.

Dr Castor says it sheds invaluable light on such relationships at the time.

"We tend to assume that marriages in this class at this time were arranged for dynastic reasons, but Margery's letters show that everything else was slotted in around the fact that this was a couple who really loved each other."

For archaeologist Rob Edwards, 38, and great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandson of the couple, the letter is a link to the past he relishes, particularly as he works in history.

"It really reminds you that the people you are studying are very much like ourselves. They have the same feelings and the fact that they are related really does add an extra dimension.

"You can imagine it, trying to get a bit more towards the wedding from your parents. This money is going to set you up."

Julian Harrison agrees.

"The letter shows they were no different to us. They had the same loves, desires and financial problems."

The medieval writer also had other things in common with their modern counterpart.

Margery and John

John Paston III tried until he was 33 to find the "right" wife: she had to be of a good family, reasonably good-looking, and above all, rich.

However, in later letters to his elder brother his standards have dropped - he would settle for "some old thrifty draff wife" (ale wife) if she had enough money.

But this all changed when he met 17-year-old Margery, daughter of Sir Thomas Brews. Although from a good county family, she was not an heiress and her father had other daughters, so her dowry would be small.

However, despite John's emotions being engaged, the Paston family demanded a higher dowry - a dispute which appeared to have reached stalemate until the couple's mothers intervened and the marriage went ahead some time in 1477.

Don't think the advent of mobile phones and e-mails is the first time abbreviations have littered correspondence, they often abbreviated a word or two in the Middle Ages - Margery used wt for with, for example.

And while her letter is also written on paper, there is one key difference. She didn't write it herself. It would have been dictated to a man who would have written it for her.

However, says Julian Harrison: "The fact that she isn't writing the letter doesn't mean she can't write, it means she can afford someone to write for her.

"People have assumed that people in the past were illiterate, but actually levels of literacy may have been higher than we think."

Richard Buckworth-Herne-Soame, 40, recognises some but not all family traits in the letter, while his mother, Lady Eileen, notes time have changed. She admits she brought no dowry to her marriage.

"No he didn't drive a hard bargain," she says of Sir Charles.

But, Richard adds: "We still have the stubbornness."

Egypt Blocks Access To Facebook


Egyptian authorities are blocking access to Facebook within the country in an effort to quell anti-government demonstrations organized via the social network.

Egypt’s blockage was confirmed by Jillian York, a project coordinator at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society that oversees the Herdict service, who sent an email to Reuters.

However, the group We are all Khaled Said appears to be accessing Facebook via a proxy server, as a status update went up to the organization’s wall around when I started writing this post, saying “Situation can be summarized as street fighting across Cairo with focus in Central Cairo.A YouTube video posted on the group’s wall about two minutes later shows protesters jumping on an armed police vehicle trying to stop a water cannon.

The group’s explanation of its mission on the social network contains a possible clue about possibly getting around censorship by the Egyptian government — the address for the page includes a U.K. extension:

“Khaled Said, 28 years old, was tortured to death by 2 Egyptian Policemen in the street. The incident has woken up Egyptians to work against the systematic torture in Egypt and the 30 years running emergency law. We need international supporters to help us stand against Police brutality in Egypt. We invite you to support our cause. Join our Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/elshaheeed.co.uk to see how you can help.”

Some are comparing Egypt’s demonstrations to recent protests in Tunisia that led to the nation’s president stepping down from office, and given how the Tunisian uprising has been called a Facebook-powered revolution, one could see why the Egyptian government would want to block access to the social network.

Egypt’s blockage of Facebook today follows a similar move against Twitter yesterday, TechCrunch has reported, as the microblogging site has also helped protesters organize themselves.

Will the Egyptian government’s efforts to block access to social media ultimately strengthen protesters’ resolve and possibly strengthen support for the demonstration outside of Egypt?

www.allfacebook.com

STUDY: Facebooking Leads To Sex, Faster


Skip the flowers, guys: If you want to better your chances of getting a woman in the sack, maybe all you have to do is Facebook her.

Shape and Men’s Fitness found that 58 percent of men surveyed by the magazines said flirting over Facebook, texts, and chat helps them get women into bed sooner. Likewise, 80 percent of the women surveyed said that relationships lead to sex quicker today because it’s easy to stay connected.

There’s evidence that both genders are satisfied with the end result of techie flirting — almost half of the 1,200 women and men who participated in the survey describe their sex lives as amazing compared with 21 percent last year.

But there’s a caveat to all this, and I’m sure it’s something you’ve probably experienced yourself : The intimacy you have on Facebook with a potential mate can be pretty short lived. A virtual poking war is fun at first, but doesn’t necessarily translate into a healthy relationship if you never move beyond that.

I remember playing Facebook scrabble with a guy I liked, and would get excited when he’d respond right away to a word I played. Now keep in mind, I never dated this guy, and we didn’t actually speak to each other. The extent of our relationship never went beyond the word game online.

Psychologist Dr. Dorree Lynn echoes that sentiment. She says social media is actually “fostering a sense of faux intimacy” among couples. She told ABC News:

It’s easier to hop into bed than have a relationship. It’s all a function of the fast-paced world we live in, where communication skills, genuine communication skills, which means face-to-face communication, are quickly going by the wayside.

I agree with Lynn that Facebook and social media in general can make someone feel like they share a deeper connection with the object of their affection, but I think this happens only if they are communicating more online than in real life. There are plenty of examples where Facebook has helped bring couples closer together. Plus, Facebook statuses seem to be increasingly used by couples to “publicly” display feelings of affection. How is that faux intimacy?

Do you think Facebook has helped or hurt your sex life? Do you find yourself more active on Facebook when you’re in a relationship, or single?

www.allfacebook.com