Social Media Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Social Media stocks.

Social Media Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 SHOP Top Analyst Reports for Broadcom, Merck & Qualcomm
Nov 21 CLMB 5 Stocks With Recent Price Strength to Enhance Your Portfolio
Nov 21 SHOP 3 Stocks That Could Turn $1,000 into $5,000 by 2030
Nov 21 SHOP Q3 2024 Global-E Online Ltd Earnings Call
Nov 20 SHOP After Another Impressive Quarter for Shopify, Is Shopify Stock Headed Back to Its All-Time High?
Nov 20 SHOP Will Shopify Stock Be Worth More Than Amazon by 2035?
Nov 20 SHOP Claro Advisors Bets on Shopify, Acquiring $456K Stake Amid Growing Institutional Interest
Nov 20 SHOP Best Momentum Stocks to Buy for November 20th
Nov 20 SPT Sprout Social Empowers Brands to Unlock New Potential and Boost Competitiveness with Updates to its Suite of AI Solutions
Nov 20 SHOP New Strong Buy Stocks for November 20th
Nov 19 SHOP Is Advantest (ATEYY) Stock Outpacing Its Computer and Technology Peers This Year?
Nov 19 SHOP Holocaust Denial Merchandise Tests Shopify’s Free Speech Ethos
Nov 19 CLMB Climb Global Solutions, Inc. (NASDAQ:CLMB) is favoured by institutional owners who hold 61% of the company
Nov 18 SHOP Top Analyst Reports for Thermo Fisher, NextEra Energy & Lowe's
Nov 18 SHOP Shopify products will be listed in Perplexity's new AI shopping tool
Nov 18 PCTY Will Paylocity Holding Corporation (PCTY) be Able to Expand its Market Share and Wallet Share For Years?
Nov 18 SPT Sprout Social Earns 2025 Buyer’s Choice Award From TrustRadius
Nov 18 SHOP Beat the Market Like Zacks: Shopify, Fiserv, Carnival Corporation in Focus
Nov 18 SHOP Shopify's Business Has Excellent Prospects, But Its Valuation Suggests Caution
Nov 17 SHOP Post-Election Reversal Tests Support After Confirming Bearish Signal – The Market Breadth
Social Media

Social media are interactive computer-mediated technologies that facilitate the creation and sharing of information, ideas, career interests and other forms of expression via virtual communities and networks. The variety of stand-alone and built-in social media services currently available introduces challenges of definition; however, there are some common features:
Social media are interactive Web 2.0 Internet-based applications.
User-generated content, such as text posts or comments, digital photos or videos, and data generated through all online interactions, is the lifeblood of social media.
Users create service-specific profiles for the website or app that are designed and maintained by the social media organization.
Social media facilitate the development of online social networks by connecting a user's profile with those of other individuals or groups.Users typically access social media services via web-based technologies on desktops and laptops, or download services that offer social media functionality to their mobile devices (e.g., smartphones and tablets). As users engage with these electronic services, they create highly interactive platforms through which individuals, communities, and organizations can share, co-create, discuss, and modify user-generated content or pre-made content posted online.
Networks formed through social media change the way groups of people interact and communicate. They "introduce substantial and pervasive changes to communication between organizations, communities, and individuals." These changes are the focus of the emerging fields of technoself studies. Social media differ from paper-based media (e.g., magazines and newspapers) and traditional electronic media such as TV broadcasting in many ways, including quality, reach, frequency, interactivity, usability, immediacy, and performance. Social media outlets operate in a dialogic transmission system (many sources to many receivers). This is in contrast to traditional media which operates under a monologic transmission model (one source to many receivers), such as a newspaper which is delivered to many subscribers, or a radio station which broadcasts the same programs to an entire city. Some of the most popular social media websites, with over 100 million registered users, include Facebook (and its associated Facebook Messenger), Instagram, WhatsApp, Google+, Myspace, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Snapchat, Tumblr, Twitter, Viber, VK, WeChat, Weibo, Baidu Tieba, and Wikia.
Observers have noted a range of positive and negative impacts of social media use. Social media can help to improve an individual's sense of connectedness with real or online communities, and can be an effective communication (or marketing) tool for corporations, entrepreneurs, nonprofit organizations, advocacy groups, political parties, and governments. At the same time, concerns have been raised about possible links between heavy social media use and depression, and even the issues of cyberbullying, online harassment and "trolling". Currently, about half of young adults have been cyberbullied, and of those, 20% said that they have been cyberbullied regularly. Another survey in the U.S. applied the Precaution Process Adoption Model to cyberbullying on Facebook among 7th grade students. According to this study, 69% of 7th grade students claim to have experienced cyberbullying, and they also said that it was worse than face-to-face bullying. Both the bully and the victim are negatively affected, and the intensity, duration, and frequency of bullying are the three aspects that increase the negative effects on both of them.

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