BIODANCE Bio-Collagen Real Deep Mask Review
seen from Brazil
seen from Estonia

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Ukraine
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Romania

seen from Brazil
seen from Spain
seen from Brazil
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Switzerland
seen from Brazil
BIODANCE Bio-Collagen Real Deep Mask Review
What's trending now on Bing images for January 2026. From "Calm Blue" aesthetics to 1930s public domain icons and AI vision boards, see the
The life of Begum Khaleda Zia (1946-2025). This biography covers her early years, political rise, 3 terms as PM, and her legacy in Banglades
Stop struggling with rigid budgets. Learn the psychological hacks, automation tricks, and real-world money management tips that actually wor
Stop struggling with rigid budgets. Learn the psychological hacks, automation tricks, and real-world money management tips that actually wor
Your most obnoxious Facebook friends are probably popular in real life: study
Study suggests Facebook users are hesitant to unfriend digital jerks if they're 'socially popular' offline .
If you have a Facebook account, chances are you've also experienced the regret of accepting a friend request from someone who fills your newsfeed with obnoxious, inflammatory or straight up offensive posts.
We've all been there. Heck, judging by how many people gripe about the "ignorant" and "stupid" things their contacts share each day, a lot of us still are.
But why?
The findings of a new study out of Nottingham Trent University in the U.K. suggest that Facebook users may be inclined to put up with bullying in their network for much the same reason they did so in high school — because those bullies are popular.
"The social repercussions of unfriending someone reach far beyond the boundaries of the online network," said Nottingham's Sarah Buglass, while discussing the study at a British Psychological Society conference this week.
"People don't want to risk causing offline tension with their friends, family members or colleagues by disconnecting them from their online lives," she continued. "Remaining online friends with troublemakers appears to be a social necessity for some."
To reach this conclusion, Buglass and her research team analyzed a total of 5,113 individual online relationships from the perspective of 52 people ranging in age from 13 to 45.
The participants were presented with 100 randomly selected contacts from their own Facebook "friends" list and asked to rate them on such things as relational closeness, online disagreements they've had with that contact, and online disagreements they've witnessed between the contact and others.
Researchers also asked how frequently the participant communicated with each randomly selected Facebook friend both online and off.