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・ Jujutla
・ Juicy Fruit (Disco Freak)
・ Juicy Fruit (song)
・ Juicy Fruits
・ Juicy J
・ Juicy J discography
・ Juicy J production discography
・ Juicy Juice
・ Juicy Love
・ Juicy Lucy (album)
・ Juicy Lucy (band)
・ Juicy M
・ Juicy Music
・ Juicy Pink Box
・ Juicy!
JuicyCampus
・ Juif
・ Juif, Saône-et-Loire
・ Juifen
・ Juigalpa, Chontales
・ Juignac
・ Juignettes
・ Juigné-des-Moutiers
・ Juigné-sur-Loire
・ Juigné-sur-Sarthe
・ Juil ciego
・ Juillac
・ Juillac, Corrèze
・ Juillac, Gers
・ Juillac, Gironde


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JuicyCampus : ウィキペディア英語版
JuicyCampus
JuicyCampus.com was a website focusing on gossip, rumors, and rants related to colleges and universities in the United States. As of February 5, 2009, it is out of business.
JuicyCampus described itself as an enabler of "online anonymous free speech on college campuses." Through strict privacy policies, it allowed users to post messages and comments without having to worry about identification. Readers were able to vote on which posts they found "juiciest," or most provocative. As of March 16, 2008 the site contained rumors for 59 colleges and universities.〔"A Crash Course in Online Gossip." ''The New York Times''. (1 ).〕 By October 2008, JuicyCampus had expanded to over 500 college campuses. Much of its content was related to fraternities and sororities.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Web site features campus gossip )
The creator of JuicyCampus, identified in an article in ''The Chronicle of Higher Education'' as a Duke University alumnus named Matt Ivester,〔Young, Jeffrey R. "(How to Combat a Campus Gossip Web Site (and Why You Shouldn't) )." ''The Chronicle of Higher Education''. March 17, 2008.〕 described the website as within a trend of "gossip 2.0," which he sees as "pretty entertaining."〔 Timothy Chester, chief information officer of Pepperdine University, described the purpose of JuicyCampus in a letter written to Google as to create a "virtual bathroom wall' for abusive, degrading, and hateful speech."〔
==History==
The website began operation in August 2007,〔 and was closed indefinitely on February 5, 2009 due to lack of revenue.
It was initially launched on just seven campuses (Duke University, Loyola Marymount University, UNC, USC, Pepperdine, UCLA and College of Charleston).
On December 8, 2007 from a computer at Loyola Marymount University, a student allegedly posted a threat to shoot random students on the campus' "Alumni Mall". The quote read, "I am going to shoot and kill as many people as I can until which time I am incapacitated or killed by the police." The Los Angeles Police Department apprehended the suspect. The police released the suspect without filing charges. The message was originally posted on the website 4chan.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Cleaning up the Juice )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「JuicyCampus」の詳細全文を読む



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