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Nonprofit Blogging and Social Networking Policies: Examples?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Now, I swear I remember seeing something from Easter Seals or another nonprofit on a listserv that mentioned either social networking policy or blogging policy. t have naughty gifts on your Facebook profile if your ???friends??? The Internet Public Discourse policy applies to Easter Seals headquarters and to Affiliates.

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Meet Amy Fox of MuseumTweets: Best Practices for Micro Blogging in Museums

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I first met Amy Fox when she de-lurked on the Museum Computer Network listserv. I have also been following public Twitter updates that include the key word museum using Twitter Alerts. Then start by searching for keywords such as "museum" and make note of both museums and individuals whose profiles look interesting.

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Wikis: What, When, Why

Museum 2.0

Wikis don't explicitly acknowledge individuals with "profile power"--content is prioritized, not identity. A great public example of a wiki-based project is WeAreMedia , a wiki with the goal of creating a "social media starter kit for non-profits." They require more of their audience in terms of participation than other Web 2.0

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The year in audio

The Verge

Nick profiles How Long Gone. He profiled How Long Gone , a show y’all know I’m also snacking on. The Financial Times profiled them, too, last week, under the angle of “podcasts capitalizing on friendships.” Another shoutout for our friend Nick Quah over at Vulture (and one with a Spotify angle). Icing on the cake. -AB.

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NpTech Tag: Roundups from and about Facebook and More

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

I've also added the pink ribbon to my Facebook profile. If we're thinking of Facebook groups (or listservs for that matter) as online communities, what personalities do you see in the communities you are managing? See also the post on TechSoup, " How to Fund and Cost ICT ," a publication from the ICTHUB.

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