Like to rate videos and let people know what you think?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Like to share videos with friends?
Automatically share your ratings, favorites, and more on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Reader with YouTube Autoshare.
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Only one word can describe this video: fail. The examples of "the online mistakes" are actually examples of "real life screw-ups", and are posted (mostly) by the people who are fillming or is in the video. i would say that the first two are examples of online mistakes, but it isn't hard to delete those either. (Also, they can be photoshop or a prank)
Looks like FaceBook may have wised up and did what they should have done at least two years ago -- simply have someone join those groups and become the administrator! At least, "there are no admins left in this group" now gets only 29 hits in Google, many of them in discussions about Facebook software. A Bing search gets 38 hits.
Or maybe someone in Russia, Nigeria, or who knows where wised up first.
There's other FB fail out there that people could have prevented that would have made better examples.
The girl who got herself fired by complaining about her boss on Facebook after making him a FB friend, for example. Just about anything on the site STFU, Parents.
My problem with this video is that most of your example videos were NOT posted by the people in those videos. The light saber guy video in particular is known to have been posted by bullies, not the man in the video.
If anything, showing those videos points out how much control we don't have. Even if you never own a Facebook page, you can't stop someone from posting a photo or video of you to their own account. Why show examples of things we can't control?
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
The examples of "the online mistakes" are actually examples of "real life screw-ups", and are posted (mostly) by the people who are fillming or is in the video. i would say that the first two are examples of online mistakes, but it isn't hard to delete those either. (Also, they can be photoshop or a prank)
Or maybe someone in Russia, Nigeria, or who knows where wised up first.
The girl who got herself fired by complaining about her boss on Facebook after making him a FB friend, for example. Just about anything on the site STFU, Parents.
If anything, showing those videos points out how much control we don't have. Even if you never own a Facebook page, you can't stop someone from posting a photo or video of you to their own account. Why show examples of things we can't control?