Word: facebookers
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...Facebook Fanaticism,” column, Oct. 12, and “Students Rage for a Living Wage,” news...
...have an idea as to why Facebook might be so incredibly popular here, and it is because of The Crimson. I love Facebook just as much as anyone does, but The Crimson’s use of Facebook as a source for its articles has gotten pretty ridiculous...
...give an example. Say that I’m a Crimson editor writing an article about a student campaign for a living wage. “Oh,” I think to myself, “I’ll just check the Facebook group section to see if the Student Labor Action Movement has a group, and then I’ll include its group membership in my article...
...Facebook does have a lot of information about what’s happening on campus, but Facebook group membership is completely arbitrary. Just because a group has 200 members, it does not mean the group’s “idea” is important to all 200. Nor does it mean that the group’s creator is an authority on the subject, because there are no prerequisites for making Facebook groups...
...says Hufstedler, describing their primary focus. Their answer to this dilemma is communication. According to Hufstedler, “there are plenty of musicians, but no network to connect them.” Drake maintains that Harvard has no cohesive scene, but only “a bunch of Facebook groups, very fragmented.”Hufstedler envisions CARAR, which is currently awaiting official recognition as a student organization, as the “center point” of the Harvard rock scene. The group hopes to remedy the lack of knowledge about resources available to student musicians and create...