24 posts tagged “myspace”
For those of you that disconnected during Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, New Year, etc… Welcome back. Here’s a summary of the most interesting social media and mobile news I read in the last few weeks:
Apple:
- 1/6/09: At Macworld….
- Apple announced tiered pricing for songs on iTunes that allows record labels to charge higher amounts for more popular songs… Their new pricing scheme, which will launch in April will offer songs at 69 cents, 99 cents, or $1.29. When I heard this, I couldn’t help but think of the old Taco Bell commercials of the early 1990s… “.59, .79, .99” I know record labels need to make a buck, but I’m more inclined to pay $1.29 for a taco than I am for a new song on iTunes.
- On a happier note, songs will finally be DRM free and 256 Kbps AAC by the end of Q1. Today, iTunes store has 8 million DRM-free songs. By the end of March, they’ll have 10 million.
- And, if you’ve got an iPhone 3G, you’ll be able to download songs directly to your iPhone over the 3G network, and the songs will sync between your computer and your phone….Ahhh… Finally!
- In FY 2008, Apple sold 9.7 million Macs, and Mac sales increased at two times the rate of the overall PC market.
- The new version of iPhoto within iLife will have facial recognition software, which allows you to pick photos of a specific friend from your album without a text tag. And, iPhoto will be Facebook and Flickr compatible!
- 1/5/09: Steve Jobs told the world that his recent rapid weight loss is due to a hormone imbalance and not a return of pancreatic cancer.
Facebook:
- 1/2/09: Facebook sued Brazilian start-up Power.com for trademark and copyright infringement, violation of the computer fraud and abuse act, and unlawful competition. Facebook’s complain states that Power.com “is offering a product that solicits, stores and uses Facebook login information to access information stored on Facebook computers without authorization and to display Facebook copyrighted material without permission.” You can read the NY Times article that describes the suit here.
- 12/31/08: Proving that the “blue screen of death” is alive and well, Microsoft’s 2006 30GB model Zune experienced a massive failure on the last day of 2008, and users were not amused. The bug appears to have been fixed, though users are still unhappy about it.
Twitter:
- 1/5/09: Twitter was hacked over the weekend, and 33 high profile accounts were hijacked. There was also a separate phishing scam through the direct message capability. You can learn more about it on Twitter’s blog.
UIQ:
- 1/5/09: Symbian partner, UIQ filed for bankruptcy.
Verizon:
- 1/5/09: BusinessWeek reports that “The $5.9 billion acquisition of cellular carrier Alltel Corp. by Verizon Wireless will close on Jan. 9”. This will mean that Verizon trumps AT&T as the largest US mobile operator with ~ 78 million subscribers.
Xobni:
1/5/09: Xobni (inbox spelled backwards), the company behind a very cool outlook plug-in that turns your email inbox into a social network, announced $7M in Series B funding from new investor Cisco Systems and Xobni’s existing investors.
Layoffs:
1/6/09: Clearspring, which plays in the widget distribution space laid off 20% of its workforce in early December, and their President/COO, Jay Rappaport is leaving.
Misc. Social Media & Mobile News:
- I just learned about Twtpoll, which lets you poll your Twitter followers. Looks like a great idea if you’re a brand that wants feedback from its community of users.
- 1/1/09: California passed a no-text messaging while driving rule, which became legal on Jan 1. I can’t help but wonder how it can be illegal to text while driving, and yet, it’s perfectly okay to fiddle with your radio, AC, or GPS. Not that I’m advocating texting while driving. It just seems like an inane law, given the many distracting things you could be doing while driving.
- 1/3/09 The 1.0 version of a Firefox add-on called Power Twitter launched, allowing “search, search scoped to a specific user, status history peeking on mouseover, Facebook status updates, inline YouTube, Flickr, and TwitPic, url expansion, url translation to page titles, and open web update (news feed) mapping.” It sounds interesting to me and gets good reviews, but I’ve heard a few complaints from people I follow on Twitter, so I’m waiting until the next release.
- 12/31: TechCrunch did a great piece on the Top Social Media Sites of 2008, which summarizes data from comScore. Top Social Media Sites (ranked by unique worldwide visitors November, 2008; comScore):
- Blogger (222 million)
- Facebook (200 million)
- MySpace (126 million)
- Wordpress (114 million)
- Windows Live Spaces (87 million)
- Yahoo Geocities (69 million)
- Flickr (64 million)
- hi5 (58 million)
- Orkut (46 million)
- Six Apart (46 million)
- Baidu Space (40 million)
- Friendster (31 million)
- 56.com (29 million)
- Webs.com (24 million)
- Bebo (24 million)
- Scribd (23 million)
- Lycos Tripod (23 million)
- Tagged (22 million)
- imeem (22 million)
- Netlog (21 million)
- 12/31/08: TechCrunch has an interesting article on the rise of Y-Combinator, start-up Scribd. Scribd allows users to post and share documents online. TechCrunch reports: “According to the comScore numbers, it has more unique visitors worldwide than imeem and almost as many as Bebo, with 23.5 million visitors in November, 2008. (In the U.S., it had about 4 million visitors).” And, Scribd grew “218 percent from November, 2007. Pretty incredible stats for a company that initially only raised $300,000! “
- 12/31/08 The UK loves watching the TV show “Big Brother,” and rumor has it, they may be forced to live a frightening real-life version of it in the future. The Guardian reports,
“The private sector will be asked to manage and run a communications database that will keep track of everyone's calls, emails, texts and internet use under a key option contained in a consultation paper to be published next month by Jacqui Smith, the home secretary.
A cabinet decision to put the management of the multibillion pound database of all UK communications traffic into private hands would be accompanied by tougher legal safeguards to guarantee against leaks and accidental data losses.”Even though the report hasn’t yet been published, critics of its rumored contents are speaking out against it including Sir Ken Macdonald, the former director of public prosecutions.
- 12/31/08: Obama’s Change.gov site is getting great use. According to TechCrunch, “more than 74,031 people have submitted more than 53,369 questions (and counting) for his administration and voted 3,122,015 times to prioritize the questions in a Digg-like fashion.” You can see the top list of questions here.
- 12/30/08: Hitwise reported 3 interesting holiday social media trends in the UK:
- “Facebook accounts for 1 in 22 UK Internet visits on Christmas Day”
- "Video site YouTube received more UK Internet traffic than Microsoft Windows Live Mail (Hotmail) for the first time during Christmas week 2008.”
- “social networks accounted for 1 in every 10 UK Internet visits during Christmas week.”
- 12/26/08: Amazon.com announced it’s best Christmas season ever with “6.3 million items ordered worldwide on the peak day, Dec. 15, which is a record-breaking 72.9 items per second.”
- 12/15/08: BusinessWeek reports that Palm will launch its new Nova OS at CES. After several layoffs, many ups and downs over the years, I find it amusing that they decided to name it Nova (“no va” means “no go” in Spanish.) Chevrolet learned how disastrous that name could be when it launched the Chevy Nova years ago. I’m not sure if this was lost on Palm’s marketing team, if it was an inside joke, or if they knew about it and decided to buck tradition and go with the name anyway. I love Palm, and I’m keeping fingers crossed they find a way to make this work. I think it’ll be tough in to re-gain developers’ trust after several false starts in recent years.
I took a blogging break for Turkey, so this social media and mobile round-up includes the most interesting news in mobile and social media since November 21:
Apple:
- Apple is changing the App store to show a broader range of top apps in each category and separated free from paid apps. Hopefully this will discourage developers from arbitrarily lowering prices of their apps to make them turn up closer to the top of the listings.
- Apple gives developers the ability to deliver promo codes for their iPhone apps.
- iTunes App store results, 5 months in.
- Bebo launched “Social Inbox” on December 10. It “combines e-mail, social networking and media recommendations in one easy-to-use interface. “
- Facebook is reportedly running A/B tests on its sign-up process. I think this is great. Testing is a very important part of improving customer experience, and more companies should test UI regularly. Here’s more on the test.
- Facebook announced the 5 grand prize recipients of its fbFund of $225,000 each: GroupCard, Kontagent, Mousehunt, by HitGrab, WedSnap created the Weddingbook application, and Wildfire
- TechCrunch interviewed Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg here.
- Facebook Connect is now generally available. TechCrunch reports “Now any third party website that wants to pull personal data about visitors from Facebook - and send back activity reports to their news feeds - can do so by first filling out a self-service application.”
- Good article from NY Times. Facebook Connect attempts 2 turn around dismal performance of social media ads.
- Oodle will power the Facebook Market (classifieds)
- MySpace launched its new MySpace Toolbar for Firefox and Internet Explorer. It enables: auto login, alerts, updates, Myspace Search by Google, quick links and user links from your browser.
- MySpace announced DataPortability Project with new data portability standards.
- MySpace launches streaming mobile video.
- Mobile / Android:
- The Open Handset Alliance announced that the following 14 companies joined the Alliance: AKM Semiconductor Inc., ARM, ASUSTek Computer Inc., Atheros Communications, Borqs, Ericsson, Garmin International Inc., Huawei Technologies, Omron Software Co. Ltd, Softbank Mobile Corporation, Sony Ericsson, Teleca AB, Toshiba Corporation and Vodafone.
- “Google's Android Open Handset Alliance Project unveiled the Android Dev Phone 1. The Android Dev Phone 1 is hardware and sim unlocked G1 in black with a special skin aimed at developers. The Android Dev Phone 1 sells for $399 in 18 international markets. “
- The Phandroid blog speculates that Google will soon introduce Ringtones and Wallpapers to the Android Market.
- Google advertisers can now “show [their] desktop text and image ads on the iPhone, the T-Mobile G1, and other mobile devices with full (HTML) Internet browsers.”
- The Kogan Agora is the latest Android phone. It’s now available for pre-order and will be released Jan 29, 2009.
- Here’s an interesting summary of Android Market performance from MediaLets.
- HTC raised G1 sales forecasts for 2008 to 1 million devices.
- Chrome:
- Google’s new browser, Chrome, exited beta on December 11.
- Gmail:
- Gmail adds to-do list management (“tasks”) to its list of features.
- You can now SMS through Gmail’s new task manager. You can activate it here.
- Search:
- Google released zeitgeist 2008, a summary of the “big events, memorable moments and emerging trends that captivated us in 2008”. The fastest rising global search terms? That’s right folks, it’s the ever frightening, “Sarah Palin” at #1 and “Jonas Brothers” at #10. Obama falls in at #6. In the UK, Google reports: “From BBC's iPlayer to Facebook to YouTube, many of the top searches in Britain this year have been for our favourite websites. We also see three web-savvy politicians come tops in searches”. Check out all the stats here. Very cool stuff.
- FriendConnect is now open for all websites. As TechCrunch reports “Google Friend Connect is OpenSocial’s answer to Facebook Connect. It lets other websites accept a member’s OpenSocial OpenID username and password to log into their sites. More importantly, it also lets websites access users’ social data, which includes friend lists, profile information, feed messages, reviews, ratings and the like.”
- YouTube:
- YouTube launched an enhanced abuse and safety page.
- YouTube is tightening its standards on content.
- CrunchGear speculates that Microsoft may announce a Zune Phone at CES 2009.
- MOTODEV’s Widget Developer Challenge underway. Be one of the first 100 unique submissions received by December 18, 2008, and win a $250 gift card to Amazon.com. Click here to learn more.
- Motorola introduces Rokr EM35 with WebUI widgets & Windows Media support & music player with virtual surround sound.
- Nokia announced the N97, which looks like a very cool phone.
- Nokia announces “Point and Find” mobile image recognition technology. It allows users to point their camera phones at poster or billboard and get more information on what’s being advertised on their phones. I’ve seen technology like this before from companies like Pongr and Kooaba. It’s great to see a big mobile OEM embrace it. Check out a demo of Point and Find here.
- Nokia released a new email platform for Ovi. Check out the beta here.
- Flickr launched a new mobile site, which allows video streaming.
- Recent Layoffs:
- CBS Interactive: CBS Interactive laid off workers at LastFM, but rumor has it that CBS Interactive isn’t reporting the extent of layoffs across CBS Interactive. CBS isn’t confirming the extent of the layoffs, but TechCrunch is speculating: “According to a source inside Cnet, the buzz is that the total number of employees asked to leave today was “275-ish.” A CBS spokesperson wouldn’t confirm that number. So take it as a rough estimate.”
- Microblogging platform, Pownce, closes doors & founders including Digg's Kevin Rose join Six Apart
- Industry News:
- Mobile ad rates drop as inventory increases. Experts say mobile CPMs are ~$15 compared w/ ~$23 earlier this year.
- Blogging platform, Tumblr received $4.5M in series B investment from its Series A investors in a new round of funding this week. They also announced that they’ll be releasing premium services.
- VC firm, Accel Partners, announced two funds worth $1Billion.
- Industry Events:
- LeWeb08 took place in Paris December 9-10.
- While I couldn’t make it to Paris, I enjoyed watching some of it on UStream.
- The interview with Marissa Mayer, Google’s Vice President of Search Product, was particularly good.
- In particular, the closing session on the main stage with the Gillmor Gang was entertaining. I don’t see it up on the Gillmor Gang site yet, but fingers crossed they’ll post it when they’re back from Europe.
- Seesmic founder and organizer of Le Web, Loic LeMeur apologizes for “organizational issues” at LeWeb08.
- Technology announcements:
- Hi5: Announced virtual gifts on December 10.
- Opera: The alpha of the Opera 10 browser is now available for free download.
- TechCrunch reports that “Netvibes Founder Building iPhone-Like Operating System For Netbooks” called Joliweb.
- TechCrunch reports that UStream is entering the race to dominate the live mobile broadcasting market (other players include Qik, Kyte, and FlixWagon). See a video and analysis here.
- New Start-up, “Give Real” encourages people to forget about giving virtual gifts in favor of giving “real drinks redeemable at any bar or restaurant.” Check it out here and as an app on Facebook.
- Misc.
- Itsmy released a mobile social networking study of 15,000 active users. Results here.
- In her November 21 BoomTown blog Kara Swisher summarized the Astia Awards Dinner, which celebrated venture capital firms that support women-led companies. I’m not a fan of awards dinners so I wouldn’t normally mention one, except that for this one, Venture Capitalist, Tim Draper, who couldn’t make it to the event in person, sent in a very funny video of himself taking off a piece of clothing for every woman-led company he’s invested in.
- Vodafone buys European mobile location and navigation services company, Wayfinder.
- Sling.com, which, like Hulu, allows you to watch TV shows online, launched in beta.
Apple:
- iPhone 2.2 Firmware was released. MobileCrunch’s review is here. Excerpted summary of the article: “Safari’s address bar/search … tweaked a bit, apps now request a rating upon deletion, over-the-air podcast downloads …, various video and audio quality tweaks, and assorted bug fixes throughout… Google Maps has been upgraded to include Street View and directions for public transit and walking - if you have an iPhone rather than an iPod Touch…According to early reports, 2.2 for the iPod Touch brings everything but the Google Maps upgrade.”
- The SEC gave Facebook permission to stay a private company, while having over 500 shareholders. This will allow Facebook to continue to issue options and restricted stock to its current and future employees.
- Facebook launched its verified app program, which requires developers to pay $375 to have their app “verified”
- Google Mobile: John Gruber reports that Google seems to be using an undocumented API for the voice search feature in its recently updated Google Mobile iPhone application. Normally doing this is against the SDK Guidelines. So, the questions are: Did Google get Apple’s permission to use this API? Did Apple not realize that that Google was using an undocumented API, or did they turn a blind eye to the usage. You can read about the saga on John Gruber’s post here. You can see the Google video demo of the Google Mobile update here.
- YouTube: A researcher is claiming that he’s discovered the key to predicting the success of YouTube videos. TechCruch’s summary is very good: “Crane claims every time a YouTube video turns into a hit, the development takes the form of an “attention spiral”, a geometric pattern that partly follows physical laws. He discovered that a decrease of popularity with certain videos, for example, can be explained through methods usually utilized in modeling the aftershocks of earthquakes.”
- Motorola launched the "MOTODEV Widget Developer Challenge" for it’s mobile Linux platform.
- MySpace for RIM’s Blackberry is which launched on Nov 12 has apparently been downloaded more than 400,000 times! You can get it here.
- Check out the real-time results of Guy Kawasaki’s ongoing survey that asks people how much they’d be willing to pay for Twitter. So far, more than 662 people say they’ll be willing to pay $5 or more a month for Twitter. 1,780 say they won’t pay and would rather Twitter go away than start charging.
- Jerry Yang stepped down as Yahoo!’s CEO, and Yahoo! Is now on the lookout for a new leader.
- Yahoo is rumored to still be thinking about buying AOL.
- Recent Layoffs:
- Strands and Qik lay off 10 % of their staff.
- Palm Inc. A friend reports that over two thirds of the business development and developer technical support teams were affected
- Industry News:
- Mobile advertising company AdMob’s latest Mobile Metrics Report just came out. You can download it here. Highlights of the report include: “The iPhone is now the #1 device worldwide in the AdMob Network with 4.1% share of requests in October. Since AdMob launched its ad units for iPhone sites and applications, iPhone requests have increased from 28 million in July to 236 million in October. This month, we break out iPhone requests by country and region.”
- Appterra, a mobile advertising company just closed a $10.5 Million round of financing and announced that former Yahoo! senior executive David Karnstedt joined its board of directors.
- “Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC) today announced that Internet advertising revenues reached almost $5.9 billion for the third quarter of 2008, representing an 11 percent increase over the same period in 2007. While double-digit annual growth continues, the quarter-to-quarter curve remains relatively flat compared to recent past performance.” Read more here. This is very good news for the technology industry, which largely monetizes through advertising. I’ve been concerned that since advertising was one of the first industries to decline in the 2000-2001 dot com fall out that the decline in internet advertising between Q4 07 and now may signal challenging times ahead for the monetization of online properties. This study is a re-assuring sign that Internet advertising is on the rise after a brief decline.
- Videoegg extended its online advertising reach to the iPhone.
- Technology announcements:
- Citysearch overhauls mobile and web sites, maximizing on Yelp's bad press. They also went social by integrating with Facebook Connect in this new beta version of Citysearch.
- SnapTell: This is a new, free iPhone application that gets great reviews from TechCrunch: “take a photo of the cover of any CD, DVD, book, or video game, and the application will automatically identify the product and find ratings and pricing information online.“ It just launched on the iPhone.
- Sony adds social networking to the Playstation in the form of its Home virtual world.
- OpenTable released an iPhone app available in the iTunes store.
- Xobni, an Outlook plug-in that helps you organize email conversations, contacts and attachments just added integrations with Yahoo Mail, Facebook, Skype, and Hoovers.
- According to a new study, 22% of consumers are unlikely to respond to email social marketing. 12% will click on messages on social sites.
- Apple
- Apple is now the #2 smartphone manufacturer. Nokia remains #1, RIM is now#3, and Motorola is #4. More here.
- The iPhone surpassed the Motorola Razr as the top selling consumer phone.
- TechCrunch reports that Facebook violated its own privacy policy to give Microsoft access to user emails: “Microsoft’s Invite2Messenger appears to violate that policy. Messenger users are asked to log in to Facebook, and then the names and email addresses of all that user’s Facebook friends are then sent to Microsoft and displayed in clear text on a page they control (Facebook itself only shows friend’s emails as images to prevent scraping). You check off which friends you want to invite to use Messenger, and then Microsoft sends each of them an email to install the client and become friends with you. Screenshots of the process (with emails removed) are below.“
- Facebook launched an app that allows users to vote for their favorite FBFund apps. There are 25 finalists, five of which will receive $225,000 FBfund grants. Add the app here.
- YouTube launched a “new advertising program that enables all video creators -- from the everyday user to a Fortune 500 advertiser -- to reach people who are interested in their content, products, or services, with relevant videos.”
- Motorola
- Interesting article on the perception of Motorola’s recent announcements regarding changes to the org: “Motorola's Turnaround Plans Meet with Skepticism”
- Nokia
- Nokia cut its 4th quarter outlook on handset sales from the 1.26 billion it forecast in October to 1.24 billion handsets. It also forecast a decrease in the global market for fixed and mobile network infrastructure. More here.
- Sony Ericsson
- Sony Ericsson ranks highest among customer satisfaction for the 3rd time in a row.
- Mobility Today is calling the Sony Ericsson Xperia X1 the “ultimate Windows Mobile phone anyone can ask for”:
- Twitter surpassed its 1 Billionth tweet this week.
- Misc:
- Recent Layoffs:
- TechCrunch reports 58,709 tech layoffs over the past two and a half months. Check out the TechCrunch Layoff Tracker to see the latest Layoff news.
- Technology announcements:
- Loopt:
- Loopt has become more popular than the MySpace and Facebook mobile apps on iPhone.
- Loopt has reportedly hired Allen&Co to represent them in a financing transaction or sale
- To cut costs, Loopt is partnering with a Qualcomm subsidiary, SnapTrack, which provides GPS data for a monthly fee.
- OpenSocial celebrates its one-year anniversary. You can see the presentation from the press and developer event here.
- Soocial launched its public beta. They say that they “aim to link all currently disconnected address books to each other. A change in one of these address books will result in a change in all your connected devices.” It’s getting good reviews. Check it out.
- European events search engine Happener just launched after a year in development. Check it out.
- You can now make your own customized guide book at Offbeatguides.com, which was founded by Technorati founder Dave Sifry.
- AOL:
- AOL announced its earnings this week. The most interesting part of the report: “Revenues decreased 17% ($207 million) to $1.0 billion, due to a 26% decline ($165 million) in Subscription revenues and a 6% decrease ($33 million) in Advertising revenues. The decline in Subscription revenues reflects mainly a decrease in domestic AOL brand subscribers, related primarily to AOL’s strategy to offer its e-mail and other products free of charge to Internet consumers. Driving the decrease in Advertising revenues were declines in display advertising on AOL Network sites and sales of advertising on third-party Internet sites, offset partially by an increase in paid-search advertising.”
- Apple:
- According to a recent report by SquareTrade, The iPhone is more reliable than Blackberry and Treo after one year of ownership. This doesn’t surprise me since there are less externally moving parts on the iPhone than a Blackberry or Treo. The study is summarized by MobileCrunch here.
- Facebook:
- Rumor has it… Will Facebook buy Twitter?
- Google:
- Google ends it’s Advertising Agreement with Yahoo because “government regulators and some advertisers continue to have concerns about the agreement”
- According to CrunchGear, Steve Ballmer says Google is behind the competition and is questioning Android’s financial strategy.
- Google patched the
- LinkedIn:
- According to an Anderson Analytics’ study, LinkedIn users are high income. You can see a good summary of the review here. Among the findings: LinkedIn users that make between $200,000 and $350,000 were around seven times to have more than 150 LinkedIn connections than those who made less money. 66% of LinkedIn users are identified as “decision makers”.
- TechCrunch reports that LinkedIn cut 10% of its staff, some of which will be re-assigned to other roles:
- MySpace:
- MySpace launched with Auditude, an online video tracking platform. Auditude fingerprints user posted videos to determine who the “content owner” is. It then inserts advertising into the video and tells the user whose content they’re watching.
- TechCrunch reports that less than 1 month after it’s launch, MySpace MyAds is making a load of money: “Demand for the product was immediate and significant, we’ve heard from multiple sources close to the company. Average daily revenue, say our sources, is $140,000 - $180,000, which means MyAds is at least a $50 million/year business for MySpace already.”
- Nokia:
- Nokia laid off around 600 workers in “follow-up” to its earlier 2008 layoffs. Nokia Research Center is also going to “sharpen its focus on fewer but stronger research areas.” You can read the announcement here.
- Nokia launched the beta of “FriendView”, “a location and micro-blogging service that helps you stay in touch with your close friends. It let’s you share where you are and how you feel from home, work, or on the go. With Friend View it is easy to meet up at only a moment’s notice. “
- RIM:
- CrunchGear reviewed the Blackberry Bold saying, “The Bold is unequivocally the best piece of hardware that RIM has ever put out.”
- Samsung:
- Samsung reportedly surpassed Motorola in US Mobile market.
- Twitter:
- Twitter is contemplating corporate accounts as a way to make money.
- Twitter is now hiring a Director of Strategic Partnerships. This is the company's first business development hire... At last, the answer to "How do those guys plan to make money?!" question will likely soon be answered.
- TechCrunch reports that “Digital Garage, Twitter’s partner with Twitter Japan, launched Twicco, a site that lets Twitter users create groups and then subscribe to them.”
- <Repeated from above> Rumors are swirling… Will Facebook buy Twitter?
- Yahoo:
- Flickr: The 3 Billionth photo was uploaded to Flickr this week.
- Misc:
- Rumor has it…
- <repeat from above> Rumors are swirling... Will Facebook buy Twitter?
- Recent Layoffs:
- <repeat from above> LinkedIn 10% layoff
- M&A:
- Wink & Reunion.com are merging and will launch a new site next year: “Through this merger, we're redefining the people search space by bridging existing social networks and providing consumers with the tools they need to find, be found, and stay connected," said Michael Tanne, chief executive officer of Wink. "We're aiming to create an entirely new online experience that simplifies people's lives by making it easy to find and keep up with everyone they know. There will be exciting developments in the coming months as we integrate our strengths and push our business forward."
- Technology announcements:
- PerfSpot: Perfspot will be rolling out “Friendvouch” to its 25M members in 3 million member segments over the coming months. Friendvouch enables users to sign up for advertising offers, which they can send to heir friends. When those friends indicate interest, Perfspot then sells those details back to advertisers and rewards the referring user. Here’s how the Friendvouch website describes it: “Make great recommendations and earn cash with friendvouch. friendvouch is a community of people created to connect you directly to your favorite brands. Become a brand ambassador while earning money in the process.”
- Barak Obama & Joe Biden: The office of the President Elect launched a transition website, where people can learn about what they’re planning. There’s a blog, newsroom, job application submission, agenda information, and more. Citizens are encouraged to submit their ideas to the future administration on all agenda items including technology.
- MobileCrunch did a nice summary of the “Mobile Market View” study by The Kelsey Group. The most interesting point from my perspective: “18.9% of mobile consumers in the United States are now toting smartphones, with 49.2% planning to pick one up within the next two years.”
- Though not released this week, I learned about the Pico Pocket Projector by Optoma, which is one of the coolest things I've seen in a while. For all of you mobile geeks, this pocket-sized projector seems to solve the problem of needing an Elmo to showcase the latest and greatest app on your phone AND makes it easy to project the videos you store on your ipod or mobile phone on a wall... Very cool.
I'm starting do to a quick weekly round-up of the Social Media and Mobile news that I find most interesting. Enjoy
AOL:
- AOL Journals and AOL Hometown are shutting down (joining Xdrive and BlueString)
- Apple announces retroactive improvements to “MobileMe”. The following improvements were silently launched in Sept. : http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3182
- iPhone users in the US now get free wi-fi at all AT&T hotspots.
- Ralph Lauren launched an iPhone app. I agree with TechCrunch... They're better off focusing their mobile marketing dollars and efforts elsewhere...Like ShoZu. ;-)
- Rumor has it…According to TechCrunch, MySpace Music's CEO position is going to Courtney Holt, MTV Networks' executive vice president of digital music and media.
- TechCrunch reports that MySpace is getting out of the Netherlands, closing its Amsterdam office and moving Beneluz ops to Berlin. When it’s attempted acquisition of Hyves didn't happen in February, it opened an office in Amsterdam to enter the Dutch market.
- Facebook’s lead over MySpace is reportedly widening. The global gap between the two is now 43.2 million visitors.
- Rumor has it… Facebook may be looking for more investment earlier than anticipated. TechCrunch reports that the bad economy may be slowing Facebook’s revenue growth, causing Facebook to look for investment in Dubai.
- TechCrunch reports that Facebook Connect will officially launch on Nov 30.
- Mobile text messaging apparently coming soon to Gmail.
- Google launched Google Apps Labs, which makes it “easier for business customers and schools using Google Apps to also take advantage of our innovations and ideas that aren't quite ready for prime time. We encourage your organization to experiment with the Google Labs features listed below to improve how you communicate and collaborate.”
- Motorola's earnings call..."$3.1 billion, down 31 percent compared to the year-ago quarter. The segment reported an operating loss of $840 million, compared to an operating loss of $248 million in the year-ago quarter. The loss this quarter includes significant charges, primarily related to decisions and plans to consolidate silicon and software platforms and simplify the product portfolio."
- Reportedly cutting 3000 jobs, 2000 in mobile unit.
- Yahoo! is now open: They are attempting to open their network, unlock social relationshps, and "mesh" Yahoo! expeirneces with other sites. Developers can learn more here.
- Rumor has it…
- Recent Layoffs
- Technology improvements:
- OpenID:
- TechCrunch reports: “If you have a Yahoo account, you have an OpenID. If you have a Windows Live account, you will soon have an OpenID. And today, if you have a Google e-mail account, you can also start using your Gmail address as an OpenID”.
- Windows Live is now supporting OpenID.
- LinkedIn launched it’s new App Platform.
- Netflix is now available on Tivo in the US
- QIK streaming video recording from the mobile is now available for Blackberry:
- SlingMedia’s new portal Sling.com set to launch soon. TechCrunch reports that the launch may be Nov 10.
- Twitter: As of the last few weeks, Britney Spears is now on Twitter.
And the number one social network in the world is...IT'S A TIE! Facebook just caught up to MySpace. The race to the top gets more and more interesting. Stay tuned...
A couple of weeks ago, I got an email from a concerned dad regarding my post, "New MySpace Lawsuite Ignites More Questions: 'Who is Responsible For Safety of Kids On-Line?'."
Troy's email points to the downside of the self-policing society we've created on-line. For the most part, "self policing' seems to work. Take Wikipedia as an example... Remember the post I wrote on Sinbad's reported death and re-birth?! But, what if you're a 13 year old kid that's being bullied, and the false information is being written about you? Enduring even 24 hours of torment caused by libelous comments written about you must be a misery. And, if you're 13 and being bullied, unlike Sinbad, it's doubtful you'll have a group of people (besides your family) willing to stand up to defend you.One thing that is also going on and I think will get much much worse with time. People taking someone's picture and pretending to be them. You can create a bad situation on many levels like that. My son is 13 and a neighbor kid put his picture on there with his name and zip code. He declared he was "gay and proud" and "horney as fuck#$". This can be devastating to a 13 year old, or anyone else for that matter. I am on day four of trying to get it removed. Imagine if someone puts a picture of your child in front a predator and lures him in. A whole new way of creating crime and it wouldn't be near as hard as one may think. We MUST come up with a system to handle this and MySpace has to respond to problems much fast than they do. Four days + is just ridiculous.
I'm happy to report that I heard back from Troy this morning. After 2 weeks of trying (no doubt very hard), he finally had the libelous comments about his son removed from MySpace... And, he only had to contact the (gasp) FBI!
I find it sad that it takes a note to the FBI to get this sort of thing sorted. I agree with Troy. There needs to be a better system in place to counteract libel on-line and to handle complaints of identity theft or photo mis-use on large social networking properties (especially where 13 year olds are concerned).I finally have an update. In short, the post has been removed and it took just under 2 weeks to get done. After numerous emails to MySpace and lack of enthusiasm in local law enforcement I contacted the FBI branch that deals with internet crimes. Within 24 hours of sending the FBI an email MySpace suddenly took an interest in my situation. I am not 100% on if the FBI helped or not but I expect they did, probably with a simple email. My advice to someone in this situation, stay persistent and don't give up/educate yourself to applicable policy at the website your having trouble with. And don't be afraid to use this website: ic3.gov.
Internet search engines and social networking sites are enabling companies to do their "due diligence" on prospective employees more extensively than ever before. According to an article I read this morning, Google (and other big companies) are researching prospective recruits by investigating their on-line presence on social networking sites. But, businesses aren't the only ones benefiting from the research made possible by on-line social networking sites. Real people are using social media to their advantage by researching prospective friends, significant others, and even criminals. With that in mind, I thought you might like the following two real-life social media "research" success stories... I couldn't make this stuff up if I tried!
...
A good friend of a friend ("FoaF") was held-up at gunpoint last month just one block from his house in the Mission / Noe Valley area of San Francisco (AKA: "Baja Noe"). The robber stole his wallet and briefcase, which had his laptop and business cards inside. Three days after the incident, he got a phone call from a woman who claimed to have his laptop... She said that she was calling from "Microsoft XP" (hilarious) and needed the log-on password to verify that the laptop was his (even more hilarious). When he said that he wouldn't give the password out over the phone, the woman on the phone proposed that he email it to her, and she gave him her Yahoo email address (most hilarious!).
From her email address, FoaF was able to guess her MySpace ID. He looked her up and discovered her full MySpace profile including (gasp) a photo! He also found that she was linked to a "friend" who FoaF recognized as the man who robbed him. Best of all, the robber had a photo of his gun on his web page!). FoaF gave all this info to the police and they recovered the laptop last week. The woman who the police recovered his laptop from alleged that she bought it from "someone she didn't know." Unsurprisingly, they don't fully believe her story.
...
A group of tech-savvy friends and I recently "saved" a less-tech savvy
friend (I'll call her "Jane") from a second date with "Jack," a blind
date she was introduced to by an equally non-tech-savvy acquaintance.
Jane went on the first blind date and was captivated enough by Jack's
superficial charm and wit long enough to consider a second date.
Prospects were good for Jack (who is apparently very smooth/sociable in
person, once held a senior managerial position at Merrill Lynch and is
now an accomplished management consultant) until our "Google
Intervention," which
uncovered his personal blog. Jack's blog chronicled his last 18 years
of "sex-ploits" (including shallow 'apologies' to women he claims to have raped
in college), on-going misogynistic views about "chicks", and less than savory (ahem)
medical history. It was so graphic that it made Tucker Max's
blog read like a children's bedtime story. Everyone involved (except
maybe Jack) agrees that Jane was lucky to have emerged from her date
with Jack unscathed and that date number two never materialized.
Yesterday, inCode Telecom Group Inc. announced its "Top 10 Global Wireless Predictions for 2007". Topping the list as the number one trend for wireless operators in 1007 is Social Networking:
On the handset side, inCode predicts that in 2007, "Multi-Function Devices [will] Become Cheaper and More Versatile". This includes the introduction of video-capable devices to the masses. They also predict that location-based services (LBS) and GPS will become mainstream. According to the article:"Social Networking Gets Mobilized. Mobility is added to existing Internet business models, services and behaviors, driving traffic for wireless operators. Teens and twenties accustomed to constant connectivity and habit-forming Web sites, such as MySpace and Facebook, lead a wave of membership in mobile social networks. Location social networking including friend and event finder services gain popularity, even in the professional and over-50 segments. Google, Yahoo and Skype are more compelling for users than wireless brands, which are hard-pressed to compete. As customer appetites for social data and video services spike, wireless operators offer more “all you can eat” pricing for high-end data packages. Social networking applications initially are preloaded on many mobile devices sold and later become downloadable."
"GPS is the location technology of choice for the wireless industry. Handset manufacturers continue to push GPS-enabled handsets as the technology evolves from popular in-car satellite navigation systems like TomTom to a broadly accepted feature in wireless phones. With Nokia having launched its first GPS-enabled handsets in early 2007 and bandwidth available to support new multimedia services, location-based service providers build critical mass. Since there are 10 to 20 times more mobile phones sold than any other consumer electronics device, wireless is a huge driver for GPS adoption. That’s great for users and handset vendors, but the benefit to operators isn’t clear."
Another of inCode's predictions is that "Mobile Advertising Breaks Loose:"
This prediction, is already starting to come true, with MVNOs like Virgin Mobile USA and Amp'd Mobile planning to offer discounts to customers for viewing advertisements on their mobile phones. Cingular Wireless, Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel have also said they're going to test the concept of mobile advertising. And, according to CNET, mobile advertising services company, Millennial Media, which was founded by Paul Palmieri, a former Verizon executive recently received $6.3 million in Series A funding."Major brands shift from basic SMS marketing to more sophisticated multimedia advertising. RBC Capital Markets expects mobile marketing revenues to balloon from $45 million in 2005 to $1.5 billion by 2010. With the technological ability to target and measure the effectiveness of mobile advertising, brands are more strategic in their approach. Operators under increasing price pressure set limits on current handset subsidization. Brands take up the slack, subsidize handsets and services for target demographics and take direct ownership of marketing channels. Rich 3G content and video services and accuracy advancements in GPS-based location services deliver further value to brands targeting existing and potential customers in innovative ways."
inCode is on the money with their predictions for 2007. Tying together the above predictions for 2007 and thinking about the future, I predict that in 2008, mobile operators will further realize the power of social media - extending beyond simply social networking to all forms of social media. If all goes as I predict, in 2008, Mobile Operators, MVNOs, OEMs, and ISVs will harness the power of social networking, GPS (LBS), and multi-function handsets and incorporate the power of social media, adding applications and web-based services to handsets that add value to consumers. Services/ applications like Helio's Buddy Beacon, Dodgeball, etc. will increase. I predict that large mobile operators and OEMs will begin to pre-load devices with social networking-focused applications that incorporate GPS. I also believe that mobile advertising will increase and that the value of GPS to mobile operators will be realized in the ability to either charge for LBS social networking services and/or offer interactive mobile advertising via these LBS-enabled social networking applications.
Collaborative and community-based entertainment like YouTube on the go will evolve and continue to be popular. I also expect that sites that monetize video footage (of, say, news events) that users take on their mobile phones will become increasingly popular....Think sites like: ScoopLive.com, Scoopt.com, and SpyMedia.com.
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Social Media Optimisation (SMO) will also play a big role in mobile social networking AND mobile advertising in 2008. Though, I expect to see real advances in and popularization of this area happening towards the end of the year and into 2009, once mobile GPS and mobile advertising are better established. I see this happening in several ways:
- When users search for friends, that mobile advertising will be well integrated so that suitable meeting locations and activities will be suggested (e.g. restaurants, coffee shops, stuff to do, sites to see, etc.)
- Based upon users mobile searches, social networking behavior, and text written in the emails they send via mobile phones, mobile LBS and mobile ads will generate new advertising content.
These are my initial thoughts for 2008, and all of them are predicated on inCode's predictions for 2008 coming true. If you've got any additional predictions for 2008 and beyond, post a comment!