4. Reading.
Read a blog entry about social networking and mark the statements true, false or not stated, according to what the text says.
So  long, Facebook
				
				Facebook has gone yet further down the path  of exploitation of our good will, or is it our apathy? It has done this by changing  its rules so that we can no longer exclude our private data from searches. So,  now, rather than just mouthing off, I am this close to deactivating my dearly  beloved Facebook account. The slippery slope of Facebook's gradual yet constant  encroachment on our privacy is of now unacceptable, I feel, in its doomed quest  to squeeze every possible drop of commercial value out of the personal data of  its users. Admittedly, it is not easy to leave a system which has such a  ubiquitous presence at the centre of your social life, but this is exactly the  feeling that Facebook relies on for its users not to leave, however much they  exploit them.
				
				It is now a fact of life that data, and now  big data, rule the roost and underpin many of our desires, our consuming habits  and our social relations. The complexity of this data is far too great for most  of us to process or come to terms with. However, we are not entrapped by the  numbers and the logic of it all, but rather by affective issues. We identify  emotionally with this social tool of ours and it marks the boundaries of our  emotional range. The result is that it's simply too inconvenient to be without  it. The world becomes dull, painfully boring even, and lacking in instant  content. We are left with ourselves and our immediate environment. What a fate!  What a place to end up in! 
				
				OK, I'll give you that social networking  adds something positive to life. The question is, what are we willing to give  up for that? Is there perhaps a better socio-economic model for social  networking than relying on basically sociopathic corporations to provide it for  us? What other choices do we have? Well, there is always WhatsApp or Twitter, or  maybe even Google+. Would they be any better? In the end, all of these  corporate systems have been successfully infiltrated by National Security  Agency surveillance systems and so Brazil’s suggestion of a non-US Internet is  interesting here, as are the timid whisperings about a democratically run DIY  version, mesh-nets that would link together on a more ad-hoc basis. I’ll be  writing more about that in the near future. In the meantime, I'm getting ready  to say "so long, Facebook". 
5. Listening.
Read the questions first, then listen to a podcast about a board game and mark the statements true or false. Remember that you can listen more than once.