Social networking sites are defined as services that permit people to create public or private profile, communicate with a list of individuals you may or may not know, and observe other users statuses and profiles (Boyd and Ellison, 2008). There are different types of social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, and etc. Social networking sites can be associated with an individual’s self-esteem especially if the individual is a frequent user of the sites. Individuals who are involved in a romantic relationship met their significant other on a social networking site. Social networking sites can be associated with numerous things. In 2010 Mehdizadeh conducted a study to examine how self-esteem and narcissism are revealed on social networking sites such as Facebook. Participants were 100 students who attended York University and subjects ranged in age from 18 to 25. Subjects completed the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale which is designed to measure self-esteem, and the Narcissism Personality Inventory (NPI)-16. The researcher coded participant’s Facebook pages based on five features on the page including on an about me section, photos, the first 20 pictures on the view photos of me section, the notes section, and the status update section. The researcher rated these five features on 5 point Likert-scales for self-promotion. The results revealed a negative correlation in that individuals with higher scores for narcissism had lower scores for self-esteem, spent considerable time on social networking sites and had more self-promoting content on SNSs. For future studies similar to this one, perhaps researchers should include more raters that personally know the participants so that more accurate information on self-promotion can be obtained. Self-esteem is tested in numerous studies that involves social networking sites. In a similar study Vogel, Rose, Roberts, and Eckles (2014) examined whether individuals who have greater exposure to upward social comparisons through social networking sites such as Facebook, have lower self-esteem. Upward social comparison is defined as comparing oneself to others who are better than oneself. Downward social comparison means comparing oneself to others who are not as great as oneself. Subjects were 145 undergraduate students (106 women) who attended a university in the Midwest. Subjects were questioned about their use of social media and their tendencies on using upward verse downward social comparison on Facebook. Participants also completed the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. The results revealed that individuals who used Facebook frequently had lower self-esteem and this was moderated by the tendencies that the individuals used toward upward social comparisons on social networking sites. Self-esteem is associated with social networking sites and is also associated w