Valentine's day in Lahore | Ft Muaaz Gilani | Street Show With Middle Class Launda

#valentinesday #publictalk #roadshow #love #relationships #holidays #publicopinion
Video Sponsored by: M G International
Join us as we hit the road to discover the pulse of the nation on Valentine's Day! This road show video explores the public's opinion and attitudes towards the holiday of love. From coast to coast, we gather insightful interviews and experiences to bring you a unique perspective on the celebration of love. Whether you're a hopeless romantic or a skeptic of the holiday, this video is sure to provide a fresh and thought-provoking look at Valentine's Day.

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Host: Syed Muaaz Ahmad Gilani (Instagram: MuaazGilani)
Show Creator: Middle Class Launda
Camera Person: Nihal Faisal
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Facebook Might Lose 4/5 of All Users in 3 Years

According to the researchers at Princeton University, the most popular social network in the world, Facebook, has spread like smoke, but now people slowly become immune to its attractions. The predictions are that the platform will be largely abandoned by 2017.

The expectations of Facebook’s impending doom build on comparing the growth curve of epidemics to those of online social networks. The researchers believe that, like bubonic plague, Facebook may also eventually die out.

Facebook celebrates its 10th birthday this week and has survived longer than its many rivals like Myspace and Bebo. However, the Princeton forecast states that the network will lose 80% of its user base within the next several years.

The researchers have based their prediction on the number of times the word “Facebook” was typed into Google search. According to Google Trends charts, Facebook searches peaked a year ago and have since been slowing down. The researchers explained that ideas, just like diseases, have been spreading infectiously between people before dying out one day. This model is successfully described with epidemiological models and can be applied to online social network dynamics. The matter is that ideas are spread between people who share ideas with each other, but once idea manifesters lose interest with it and no longer manifest the idea, they get “immune”.

Four months ago, Facebook reported almost 1.2 billion monthly active users, and the company is due to update investors on its traffic numbers soon. Although desktop traffic to the service is reported to be falling, it can be explained by the fact that people now mostly access the network via their mobile phones.

The researchers used a “SIR” (susceptible, infected, recovered) model of disease for their study. The latter creates equations to map the spread and recovery of epidemics. Different equations against the lifespan of Myspace were tested before being applied to Facebook. The former network was created in 2003 and reached its peak in 2007 with 300 million registered users, but fell out of use by 2011. Acquired by News Corp for $580 million, Myspace soon signed a $900 million deal with Google and was once valued at $12 billion. However, in the end it was sold by News Corp for as little as $35 million.

Well, the 870 million users who access Facebook via their mobile phones can easily explain the drop in Google searches – they don’t have to type the word Facebook into Google to log on, because they have mobile apps now. Still, Facebook has officially admitted that during the previous 3 months they did see a decrease in daily users, especially among younger teens. However, the company’s investors are quite happy with Facebook’s share price, which reached record highs this month, valuing the social network at $142 billion.

UK Will Block Payments to Sites Failing to Restrict Children Access to Porn

It seems that UK banks and credit card companies will be asked to hold back cash from customers of sites hosting explicit content if they fail to implement restrictions to stop children from accessing it.


Financial entities and the video services regulator are going to meet in October to finalize the deal. Media reports also reveal that a voluntary deal might be agreed with credit card firms. It seems that government would be prepared to consider legislation, if necessary.

While some online services require users to verify their age, most of them offer free and unrestricted access to any visitors. This is why the authority regulating British websites hosting videos decided to act against services operating in this way. In the beginning of 2013, regulator Ofcom fined Playboy £100,000 for failing to protect kids from porn content. A couple of websites owned by Playboy allowed everyone to access explicit content without having acceptable controls in place to check that users are adults. Ofcom claimed that Playboy’s failure to protect kids from potentially accessing adult content was serious, repeated and reckless.
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