LinkAsia
| Mar 19, 2013
Shanghai's Huangpu River, one of the city's main water sources, was filled to the brim this past week with the rotting corpses of almost 3,000 pigs. LinkAsia's Jing Gao reports that this triggered a massive public outcry on China's social networks...
Newsy
| Feb 2, 2013
Twitter announced 250,000 accounts were hacked on Friday. This comes after news was revealed on the recent hacker attacks targeting The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. While those attacks are being blamed on hackers based on China, it ...
Newsy
| Jan 15, 2013
Facebook has launched a complex new "Graph Search" allowing users to seek out people, places, photos and interests on their social network in various combinations. Facebookers, for example, could search for favorite restaurants among school chums ...
Reuters
| Dec 4, 2012
Pope Bendict is finally getting with the program with his very own Twitter account @Pontifex, so Anthony DeRosa of Reuters is offering five tweeting tips for His Holiness, including .. keep it short, it's not a sermon, be yourself and don't spam.
CNN
| Aug 27, 2012
Netizens in China are in a frenzy over rumors that a body double stood in for Gu Kailai during her recent murder trial.
LinkAsia
| Feb 3, 2012
Morning show host Maya Khan faced fierce backlash on Pakistan's social networks after a segment of her Samaa TV show went viral. Wajahat Khan explains why so many people were angry at her for chasing around young couples dating without their paren...
LinkAsia
| Dec 9, 2011
India's Telecoms and Information Technology Minister Kapil Sibal, reacting to a barrage of offensive material posted online about some of India's most powerful leaders, has asked social networks to screen content. Journalist Ajoy Bose reports from...
LinkAsia
| Aug 3, 2011
Anger is rising in China over the Wenzhou train crash, despite moves by the CCP to control media reports of the accident. Charlie Custer reports on reactions to the incident on China's social networks, as well as reports from survivors.
Al Jazeera English
| Jun 20, 2011
Rageh Omaar examines how the death of a penniless fruit seller in Tunisia first ignited mass revolt in the country, led to the overthrow of its president and effects far beyond its borders.
— May 15 at 04:51 pm
...networks are becoming increasingly popular as one can find almost each and every person on these Online Social Networks (OSNs), such as Facebook...
— May 16 at 06:01 pm
...we pamping yet? Trust me, it's worth the pamp and circumstance. Pampadour is 2 parts Pinterest, 1 part Facebook and above all, a beauty communit...
— May 15 at 11:22 pm
...Google Plus could be vital to Google’s future. Despite the 190 million people that Google says use its social network every month, Google Plus h...
— May 14 at 01:38 pm
...application that deletes one in six users' Facebook accounts in a digital form of Russian roulette was blocked by the social network just hours ...