
An interesting widget arrived by way of Israel in the form of Zooshia, which enables websites to embed a customizable area containing feeds from Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.

An interesting widget arrived by way of Israel in the form of Zooshia, which enables websites to embed a customizable area containing feeds from Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube.

Anyone can post a review of a restaurant or product online, and the anonymity of the World Wide Web makes for ample opportunity for those reviews to be less than truthful, whether to surreptitiously promote the subject of the review, or to maliciously attack it. Try clicking on Cliq to see what your Facebook friends have to say.

Here’s a Google Chrome extension that will take Facebook’s ticker right off your screen.

Facebook’s new subscribe button appears to yield more website traffic than either Twitter or Google Plus.

Use third-party posting applications at your own risk.

It’s almost like a combination of Amway and the pyramid scheme has come to Facebook in the form of IncentiVine, the difference being that the platform is risk-free, so there is no need to fear losing money, Bernie Madoff-style.

Two different apps have come to our attention that boast a single point of access to Facebook and Google Plus, among other social media.

An Internet startup called eDealya claims it can help brands achieve clickthrough rates of 23 percent and seven percent conversion rates.

Coaches use Facebook for half of their recruiting interactions.
According to the latest research from eMarketer, Facebook dominated the 80 percent of companies with 100 or more employees tusing social media in their marketing campaigns this year, as the social network was part of 93 percent of those campaigns.