Increasingly, the largest players

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Increasingly, the largest players

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in the telecom market are opening divisions and launching research aimed at
analyzing user behavioral aspects.

Ericsson's strategic division, ConsumerLab, has begun conducting neuro-research, the first results of which
can be seen in the company's reports. Thus, the report prepared for
the World Mobile Congress, which starts in 3 days in Barcelona, ​​talks about the relationship between the Internet and the user's emotional state.

It has been experimentally confirmed that
slow internet and video delays not only cause stress for
the user, but also part of the blame is “shifted” onto the content owner
(brand), while the absence of freezing in video, on the poland mobile phone numbers database contrary, improves
the attitude towards the brand.

Comparison of the impact of stressful situations on the body
Comparison of the impact of stressful situations on the body
Addiction
to online games is a disease that marketers skillfully exploit. The analytics company Soomla , which deals with
the analytics of online games, recently published a study that analyzes the habits of users in mobile
games.

The report notes that
users who have made at least one purchase in a game will make
purchases in another game. Moreover, this probability is six times higher than the chance that a user who has not previously made purchases in games will decide to spend money. More than 40% of users who have paid $25 or more in one game will be willing to continue paying.Protest against illegal Airbnb hotels, New York, 2015
A couple of months ago, Airbnb released a batch of anonymous documents containing information about New York City apartment owners to prove that the community “is made up of hard-working families from all five boroughs who depend on renting out their apartments for a living, especially in an era of economic inequality.” And to underscore, once and for all, how openly it operates. The illusion of transparency was met with a certain amount of suspicion: the release of the data was tightly controlled, the documents were designed to be nearly impossible to dig into, and they were structured in a way that masked how productive Airbnb’s most active hosts were. But things may be more complicated: According to Inside Airbnb’s Murray Cox and tech writer Tom Slee, the files were heavily Photoshopped before release: “Airbnb secured a sanitized picture by conducting a one-time purge of more than a thousand registered users” in New York City.
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