Panning the internet site IDGNow found on the following matters:
"According to a survey, 33% of requests for divorce in the country cited the social network; inappropriate messages to former and nasty comments are the main reasons
Husbands and wives in the UK who are separated are increasingly citing Facebook in their petitions, according to a survey conducted by specialized local website Divorce-Online.
Launched this week, the survey revealed that 33% of requests for divorce in the country contained the word Facebook. This is a significant increase from the last time the site conducted the survey in 2009. At that time, the social network was mentioned in 20% of applications sampled by the researchers.
Although divorce lawyers are scouring Facebook for signs of infidelity, they also look for derogatory comments made by husbands and wives over the other after being separated and fighting in court, the website explains. The page found that the most common reasons for citing Facebook in a divorce case are:
-Posts inappropriate for members of the opposite sex
-Couples separate posting nasty comments about each other
Facebook-Friends of informing the behavior of former teammate (a)
Already the microblog Twitter has been cited in only 20 of the 5,000 cases analyzed by site.
As social networks become a major communication tools have become the easiest place for people to have an affair or flirt with someone of the opposite sex, says a spokesman for Divorce-Online, Mark Keenan.
"Furthermore, the use of Facebook to make comments about the partners (as) to friends has become something extremely common with both sides using the site to show their grievances against each other," he added.
With about 800 million users, the world's largest social network has also become fertile ground for finding evidence in divorce proceedings in the United States. For example, a study conducted in February 2010 by members of the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers found that 81% of these professionals have seen an increase over the previous five years in the use of evidence from social networking sites in divorce proceedings. Moreover, 66% said Facebook was a primary source to find evidence for divorce. '
Read the report on the website of the official source of matter:
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