Earlier this year, Annie Hsieh, who works at an Austin startup, downloaded an app called “Secret.”
What intrigued her was the app’s promise of anonymity. It’s a social network, not unlike Twitter, where people post things, but without names and with only vague references to locations.
Browsing: Social Networking
Social networking in the workplace might not be such a bad thing, according to a recently published Baylor academic study.
The academic case-study, published in November, was co-written by two Baylor Professors and one current Washington State University lecturer.
It found that social networks had clear, positive benefits in the workplace.

