Internet Marker

January 14, 2010

Google Wouldn’t Be Stymied

Filed under: Uncategorized — imarker @ 5:50 am

I’m sure Google could develop a good security system that wouldn’t require us to take off our shoes:

Another point of failure, acknowledged last week by the White House, was that a misspelling of Abdulmutallab’s name at the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria initially made the State Department believe he did not have a U.S. visa and therefore was less of an immediate concern.

“A system shouldn’t get stymied by a single misspelling,” Holt said. “If you mistype something in Google, Google comes back and says maybe you want to look at this other spelling.”

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January 12, 2010

Kardashian Will Tweet for $10K

Filed under: Uncategorized — imarker @ 8:59 pm

From The Daily Beast:

Several new companies, like the Beverly Hills-based Ad.ly, are facilitating the relationship between brands eager to jump on the social-networking bandwagon. “The beauty of Twitter is that everyone is an influencer in their own right,” said Sean Rad, Ad.ly’s CEO.

“Everyone is a content creator and holds a level of influence within their following.” He explains that the company is designing a “pricing algorithm” that assesses the value of someone’s audience depending on how many followers they have and how many of those people are actually listening, among other variables. Other reality stars, like Kim Kardashian’s sister Khloe, Kendra Wilkinson, and Lauren Conrad, can command anywhere from $5,000-$10,000 per tweet. Even a fake Twitter account for Twilight god Rob Pattinson can command anywhere from $1,000-$5,000 per tweet.

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January 4, 2010

Why Twitter Will Endure

Filed under: Uncategorized — imarker @ 5:33 am

From a NY Times piece by David Carr:

Like many newbies on Twitter, I vastly overestimated the importance of broadcasting on Twitter and after a while, I realized that I was not Moses and neither Twitter nor its users were wondering what I thought. Nearly a year in, I’ve come to understand that the real value of the service is listening to a wired collective voice.

Not that long ago, I was at a conference at Yale and looked at the sea of open laptops in the seats in front of me. So why wasn’t my laptop open? Because I follow people on Twitter who serve as my Web-crawling proxies, each of them tweeting links that I could examine and read on a Blackberry. Regardless of where I am, I surf far less than I used to.

At first, Twitter can be overwhelming, but think of it as a river of data rushing past that I dip a cup into every once in a while. Much of what I need to know is in that cup: if it looks like Apple is going to demo its new tablet, or Amazon sold more Kindles than actual books at Christmas, or the final vote in the Senate gets locked in on health care, I almost always learn about it first on Twitter.

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