
Personality Test Based on Jung and Briggs-Myers This free personality test will allow you to obtain your four-letter type code according to Jung's typology as developed by Myers, Briggs, von Franz, and van der Hoop. Our test is one of several ways to quantify interpretations of Jung's typology, similar but not identical, to the MBTI test (the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator® MBTI), the Jung Type Indicator, and other such instruments. IDR Labs Personality Type Test is the property of IDR Labs International. Ours is one of the few free tests that is subjected to statistical controls and validation. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and MBTI are trademarks or registered trademarks of the Myers & Briggs Foundation, in the United States and other countries. Personality tests, whether they are professional or "official" tests like the MBTI® (Myers-Briggs Type Indicator®) test, the Jung Type Indicator, or free online personality tests like this one, are indicators to help you find your personality type. This test follows established theory.
Facebook Accused Of Scanning Private Messages For Marketing Purposes Menlo Park, California – Facebook may be facing a lawsuit after some of its users showed disgust for the company making a habit of scanning private messages. Users who believed their personal and private messages on Facebook were never going to be read by someone else must have been living in a dark room for many years. Facebook has made a habit of electronically scanning the information contained withing people’s private messages in order to build marketing profiles for those users.
On the Tenth Anniversary of the US Invasion of Iraq: When WikiLeaks Exposed the 'War Logs' Share In this special posting, marking the tenth anniversary of the launch of the criminal Iraq war, here is an excerpt from my book, The Age of WikiLeaks, covering the release of the “Iraq War Logs” more than two years ago and the reaction. The release of the Iraq documents, some 391,000 in number, was originally set for August. But a week before that happened, Julian Assange told The Guardian’s David Leigh that he wanted a more diverse group of partners for this round, “and asked that Leigh delay publication to give the other outlets time to prepare programs,” Sarah Ellison would recount in Vanity Fair. Leigh said he’d agree to a six-week delay if Assange handed over so-called “package three,” the biggest leak of all (which would become Cablegate). According to Leigh, Assange said, “You can have package three tonight, but you have to give me a letter signed by The Guardian editor saying you won’t publish package three until I say so.” On October 22, the Iraq War Logs arrived.
New Facebook Terms: What Marketers Need to Know Did you know new changes are coming to Facebook as of January 1, 2015? Want to know what it all means to marketers? If you’re like most people, you won’t want to sit down and compare line-by-line to find out the exact changes. That’s why we’ve done it for you. In this article I’ll share the information you need to know about Facebook’s new terms and how the changes may impact how you use Facebook. Find out what’s new in Facebook’s terms of service. Changes Again! There are some misconceptions about what has actually changed with these updates when Facebook released their initial announcement in late November. We’ve done a line-by-line comparison. Make sure you know what’s relevant to you and review the terms yourself. What Hasn’t Changed Most of the policies are still the same. Sharing Your Content and InformationSafetyRegistration and Account SecurityProtecting Other People’s RightsPage TermsAdvertising Terms The Terms of Service policy is much shorter than it used to be. 1. 2. 3. 4. 1. 2.
Sundance 2013 WIKILEAKS Communique Film Music Magazine’s Bureau Chief, Michael Rogers and videocolumnist Leslie Harlow had the honor of interviewing Sundance 2012 Documentary Premiere feature, WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS’ composer, Will Bates (composer of 2012 Sundance Alfred P. Sloan Feature Film and Special Jury Prize winner, ANOTHER WORLD, Korean War documentary, CHOSIN) in the Sundance ASCAP green room. To lend global significance to the film’s thematic arena impact, according to Wikipedia,WIKILEAKS is: The documentary WE STEAL SECRETS: THE STORY OF WIKILEAKS explores the deeper personal and mission-mandate nature of self-referenced “truth renegade” founder Julian Assange, from his Australian online hacker youth exploits to the April 2010 initial release of the July 12, 2007 Baghdad U.S.AH-64 Apache helicopter strike, infamously known as the Collateral Murder video, to his currently residential realities. The ingratiatingly at-ease Mr. Bates: Yeah. Lots of elements, but less is more. Yeah. Yeah. I do.
Facebook’s ‘Year In Review’ Feature Will Chronicle Your 2014, Good Or Bad Facebook has again unleashed its Year In Review app, automatically compiling some of the most-liked photos from your feeds over 2014 and puts them into a neat little timeline. When you sign into Facebook, you’ll see an advertisement to check out your Year In Review, customize it, and share it with your friends. If you’re still having trouble finding it, you can simply sign into Facebook and go to this URL: For most folks, the algorithm does its job. And then you read something like this, where a man is being consistently reminded that this year, his young daughter passed away. Algorithms are essentially thoughtless.
‘We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks’ Trailer: Truth and Secrets Information may be the most valuable commodity on Earth, especially when it pertains to the inner workings and policies of major governments. Julian Assange drew the ire of countless officials in governments across the globe when he published state and military secrets through his online portal WikiLeaks. Documentarian Alex Gibney (Freakonomics, Taxi to the Dark Side, Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room) trained his camera on Assange and the furor surrounding WikiLeaks and the reveal of US military documents and videos, taken from classified servers and provided to Assange by Pfc. We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks opens on May 24th. Filmed with the startling immediacy of unfolding history, Academy Award-winning director Alex Gibney’s We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks is a riveting, multi-layered tale about transparency in the information age and our ever-elusive search for the truth. Cool Posts From Around the Web:
Facebook's 'Year in Review': For some, family tragedy Facebook's "Year in Review" scrapbook is intended to show off users' happy years, but for some it picked up on tragedy, including a man who lost his daughter. The company apologized to him. Best Buy said sorry after tweeting a joke involving a plot point at the center of a murder case covered on the first season of the popular "Serial" podcast. Whether a Maryland Best Buy location had a public pay phone outside the store was in dispute during the homicide investigation. Best Buy's quip: "We have everything you need. Bill Cosby had a Twitter fail of his own. To help celebrate reaching 1 million Twitter followers, the NFL's New England Patriots encouraged fans to retweet a post in exchange for a personalized digital Patriots jersey. In November 2012, Oprah Winfrey wanted to tell the world that Microsoft's new Surface tablet was one of her #FavoriteThings. Twitter can be a great place to take a poll -- but not with this question that Dr. Twitter also hosts plenty of hoaxes.
Confidential Wikileaks Cable (US Embassy in Nicosia) on Russian Money in Cyprus Curiously, the imposition of a tax on money deposited in Cyprus banks will hurt many Russian tax evaders, as the Wikileaks released cable below highlights, the amount of money placed in Cyprus by Russians attempting to evade Russian taxes is significant relative to the overall Cyprus banking system. The imposition of the tax is surely going to cause a flight of these funds out of Cyprus to a more stable tax haven--which is likely to destabilize the Cypriot banking sector even more.
Looking ahead: Facebook strategy for 2015 The social landscape is undergoing near-constant change, and with that, so must a brand’s strategy. As 2014 closes, marketers are prepping for the upcoming year by strategizing ways to leverage opportunities and overcome challenges. The way in which audiences are consuming content is rapidly evolving and it’s up to brands to make sure that their Facebook strategy is congruent with those habits, ensuring success and growth for 2015. Here are my predictions for the social media network. Video trumps photo If a picture is worth a thousand words, imagine how much a video is worth. We need only to look to initiatives like the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge to see how widespread video adoption has become. Shareable is the new viral Content creators have been consistently tasked with making things go viral. Additionally, with new Facebook policies announced for next year, marketers will have to pay close attention and evaluate the type of content being posted. Brands will adopt media company traits