Strathclyde Associates News BlogPrivacy Policy Strathclyde Associates Web Blog
posted by jennaharry01 26 days ago via strathclydeassociates-blog.info under strathclyde associates, strathclyde associates news, strathclyde associates blog, strathclyde associates news blog
Strathclyde Associates News Web Blog do not really collect any information from our users other than the standard information that our website statistics automatically gathers (e.g. Google Analytics). The following is just a standard Privacy Policy agreement.
We are committed to safeguarding the privacy of our website visitors; this policy sets out how we will treat your personal information. (1) What information do we collect? We may collect, store and use the following kinds of personal data: (a) data about your visits to and use of this blog; (b) data that you gave us for the purpose of registering with us and/or subscribing to our website services and/or email notifications. (2) Information about website visits We may collect information about your computer and your visits to this website such as your IP address, geographical location, browser type, referral source, length of visit and number of page views. This information may be used in the administration of this blog, to improve its usability, and for marketing purposes. Strathclyde Associates -Disclaimer
posted by jennaharry01 26 days ago via strathclydeassociates-blog.com under strathclyde associates, strathclyde associates news, strathclyde associates blog, strathclyde associates news blog
This disclaimer contains our obligations to you regarding our blog. Strathclyde Associates-Blog strongly advises that you read this disclaimer in full before proceeding to use this blog. Using the Website implies that you accept the terms of this disclaimer. We do occasionally update this disclaimer so please refer back to them in the future.
1. USE OF WEBSITE 1.1 You are permitted to use our Blog for your own purposes and to print and download material from this Blog, provided that you do not modify any content without our consent. Material on this Blog must not be republished online or offline without our permission. 1.2 Subject to paragraph 1.1, no part of this Blog may be reproduced without our prior written permission. 2. VISITOR CONDUCT 2.1 With the exception of personally identifiable information, the use of which is covered under our Privacy Policy http://strathclydeassociates-blog.com/privacy-policy/ , any material you send or post to this Blog shall be considered non-proprietary and not confidential. Unless you advise to the contrary we will be free to copy, disclose, distribute, incorporate and otherwise use such material for any and all purposes. 2.2 When using this blog you shall not post or send to or from this Blog any material for which you have not obtained all necessary consents, is discriminatory, obscene, pornographic, defamatory, liable... Strathclyde Associates-Blog: Say “Plank”!
posted by jamesgumm 27 days ago via strathclydeassociates-blog.com under strathclyde associates, strathclyde associates news, strathclyde associates blog, strathclyde associates news blog
Plank, based on a dictionary definition, refers to a piece of wood usually elongated and varies in thickness. A plank is usually used in industrial construction serving as walls, floors and ceilings of houses and buildings. But in most recent web-based phenomena, the humble piece of wood takes center stage as it becomes a viral bandwagon movement that caused millions of people around the world to lie down, face down in the most unsuspecting places one could imagine. The plank, in popular culture has been extended to planking, a verb or a gerund that requires a person or group to be photographed face down on the floor or anywhere or anything their imagination might take them.
Although many lay claim to have conceptualized this sport or mode of expression (as early as 1994), it has only been in the recent years that such practice in art and photography has caused a worldwide following. Perhaps due to the integration of social networking into people’s schema of belongingness that planking thrived. Without the internet, there would be none of such. The idea of being able to recreate the self (sometimes an illusionary manifestation of the id) forces people to exhaust all means to be an individual or be one of the group. So individuals or people involved in such activities may have found it a medium by which they can express individuality by having a peculiar spot or location photographed in or secure a sense of belonging by merely participating in such an interactio... « previous next » |
|