May 3, 2021 - Exclusive: Scientists say India government ignored warnings amid coronavirus surge

TradeBriefs Newsletter
View online   Advertise
              from TradeBriefs FMCG Daily Newsletter






TradeBriefs Editorial

From the Editor's Desk

The future of social media is sharing less, not more

We may never leave social media completely. But we will control which aspects of our identities we share, and with whom

The emergence of Facebook has been significant in how we conceive of social media. Almost every platform we use encourages us to share as much of our personal lives as possible, incentivising us with more features, filters and monetisation tools. Instead of the conscious curation that characterised social networks of the past, these platforms continue promising users that if they simply post more about themselves and their friends, they can have more fulfilling social experiences.

In recent years, however, public conversations around the darker elements of social media platforms - from data collection and privacy issues to fake news and propaganda - have led to more thinking on how we should use them (or if they should even be used at all). In the next decade, as we reassess our relationship with social media - and by extension, the Big Tech companies that run them - we will see more people leave public platforms entirely, sticking instead to small communities and friendship groups on more private platforms like WhatsApp, Telegram or Signal.

But this will be a luxury only few will be able to choose.

Continued here


TradeBriefs: Newsletters for Decision-Makers!

Advertisers of the day

Emeritus: PG Diploma in Innovation & Design Thinking online program | Accepting applications - Starts on May 4, 2021

Emeritus on behalf of NUS Business School: Apply for NUS Business School's Python for Analytics programme - Starts on May 13, 2021

Our advertisers help fund the daily operations of TradeBriefs. We request you to accept our promotional emails.

Want the newsletters, without the promotional mailers?
Get an (ad-free) subscription to TradeBriefs Premium for just $2 per month.



India, Australia aim to seal trade pact by 2022

India Business News: NEW DELHI: India and Australia will conclude the negotiations on a Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA) by the end of 2022 and reach an.




Today's TradeBriefs Cartoon

Advt: Work for the best employer - Yourself
reseller
Advantages - Best B2B audience in India, no hard-selling or up-front costs involved, access to our content repository and air-tight agreements with instant gratification.


Karnataka can sign MoU with e-commerce firms to promote its agro-products: CM

"There are a variety of products such as coffee, spices, maize, oilseeds etc in the State which has 10 agro-climatic zones. These products may also be..


$5-trillion economy needs greenfield investments

Such investments depend on a more stable policy and regulatory framework than the streamlining of procedures and digitisation of paperwork


With EPS Growth And More, Amber Enterprises India (NSE:AMBER) Is Interesting

Like a puppy chasing its tail, some new investors often chase 'the next big thing', even if that means buying 'story...


TradeBriefs Publications are read by over 10,00,000 Industry Executives
About Us  |  Advertise Privacy Policy    

You are receiving this mail because of your subscription with TradeBriefs.
Our mailing address is GF 25/39, West Patel Nagar, New Delhi 110008, India