
For the first time, half of adult Americans are
using social-networking sites, such as Facebook and LinkedIn, according to a
new survey by the Pew
Research Center's Internet & American Life Project. That figure rises to 65% among U.S. adult Internet users, up from 61% a year ago.
While social sites still draw young people in
droves, most of the growth in the last year has come from those over 30. For example, one-third of those ages 65 and older are social networking online compared to 26% a year ago.
More than
half (51%) of baby boomers (ages 50-64), and 70% of those between 30 and 49 are using social-media outlets. Boomers have also caught up with younger users in the proportion that access social Web
properties on a daily basis, at 60%. That's up from less than a third a year ago.
"The graying of social-networking sites continues, but the oldest users are still far less likely to be making
regular use of these tools," said Mary Madden, a Pew senior research specialist and co-author of the report. "While seniors are testing the waters, many baby boomers are beginning to make a trip to
the social-media pool part of their daily routine."
More Americans as a whole are incorporating social networking into daily life. Overall, 43% of online adults are doing so -- up from 38% a
year ago. Of all the "daily" online activities Pew asked about, only email (which 61% of Internet users access on a typical day) and search engines (59%) are used more frequently than social
networking tools.
Looking at gender differences, women have been more avid social-networking users than men since 2009, according to Pew. As of May 2011, nearly seven in 10 (69%) of online
women use social sites, compared with 60% of online men. Women are also more active, with almost half (49%) social networking on a typical day (48%) versus 38% of their male counterparts.
When
it came to qualitative assessments of social-networking sites, positive impressions far outweighed negative ones, the study found. "Good" was the most common term that people used to describe their
experience on social sites. Other terms used often were "fun," "great," "interesting" and "convenient."
Among the negative views expressed by about 20% of users, complaints were more
varied. Some expressed frustration through terms like "annoying," "overwhelming" and "confusing," while "addictive" or "addicting" were the first words cited by others. A sizeable group also
expressed ambivalence about social media, saying their experience was simply "okay."
The Pew findings were based on data from telephone interviews conducted from April 26 to May 22, 2011
with a sample of 2,277 adults 18 and older.