Posts Tagged '2010'

Zuckerberg's (Facebook) portends one that is all thumbs and no brains! – theory saying that Facebook will make us stupid!

Share on Twitter

America’s favorite boy genius, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, has announced a new form of messaging. E-mail, the last Internet link to traditional, epistolary, interpersonal communication, is, he said, outmoded. Young people, by which he meant younger than his own 26 years, desired something more nimble for their iPads, mobile phones and other devices. What he proposed was a “social inbox” where users could readily access messages from friends and then sort them — sort of a cross between instant messaging and Twitter.

We are so accustomed by now to declarations of new technological revolutions that another one hardly gets noticed, especially when it comes to finding new ways of minimizing how we communicate with each other. And it is entirely possible that this proposed geological change will be no more geological than all those other alleged game-changers. But whether his messaging system really transforms how people communicate or not, Zuckerberg issued what amounts to a manifesto that in its own terse way conveys what is already altering our lives — not only how we interact but also how we think and feel. It may even challenge the very idea of serious ideas. Call it Zuckerberg’s Revolution.

It qualifies as a revolution because how we communicate largely defines what we communicate. You know: “The medium is the message.” When Johannes Gutenberg invented the first movable-type printing press, it was rightly considered one of the signal moments in human history. By allowing books to be mass produced, Gutenberg’s press had the immediate effect of disseminating ideas far and wide, but it also had the more powerful and less immediate effect of changing the very construction of thought — through typography.

The social theorist Marshall McLuhan, in his book “The Gutenberg Galaxy,” posited that the printing press resulted in what he called “typographic man” — humans with a new consciousness shaped by the non-visual, non-auditory culture of print. He felt that print’s uniformity, its immutability, its rigidity, its logic led to a number of social transformations, among which were the rise of rationalism and of the scientific method. In facilitating reason, print also facilitated complex ideas. It was no accident that it coincided with the Renaissance. Print made us think better or, at least, with greater discipline. In effect, the printing press created the modern mind.

Writing scarcely 20 years after McLuhan, in 1985, Neil Postman, in his path-breaking book “Amusing Ourselves to Death,” saw the handwriting — or rather the images — on the wall. He lamented the demise of print under the onslaught of the visual, thanks largely to television. Like McLuhan, Postman felt that print culture helped create thought that was rational, ordered and engaging, and he blamed TV for making us mindless. Print not only welcomed ideas, it was essential to them. Television not only repelled ideas, it was inimical to them.

One wonders what Postman — who died the same year Facebook’s precursor went online — would have thought of Zuckerberg’s Revolution. Facebook is still typographically dependent. Its messages are basically printed notes. But contradicting Postman, these bits of print are no more hospitable to real ideas than the television culture Postman reviled. Indeed, in making his “social inbox” announcement, Zuckerberg introduced seven principles that he said were the basis of communication 2.0. Messages have to be seamless, informal, immediate, personal, simple, minimal and short.

As Zuckerberg no doubt recognizes, these principles are all of a piece. The seamless, informal, immediate, personal, simple, minimal and short communication is not one that is likely to convey, let alone work out, ideas, great or not. Facebook, Twitter, Habbo, MyLife and just about every other social networking site pare everything down to noun and verb and not much more. The sites, and the information on them, billboard our personal blathering, the effluvium of our lives, and they wind up not expanding the world but shrinking it to our own dimensions. You could call this a metaphor for modern life, increasingly narcissistic and trivial, except that the sites and the posts are modern life for hundreds of millions of people.

Which is where the revolutionary aspect comes in. Gutenberg’s Revolution transformed the world by broadening it, by proliferating ideas. Zuckerberg’s Revolution also may change consciousness, only this time by razing what Gutenberg had helped erect. The more we text and Twitter and “friend,” abiding by the haiku-like demands of social networking, the less likely we are to have the habit of mind or the means of expressing ourselves in interesting and complex ways.

That makes Zuckerberg the anti-Gutenberg. He has facilitated a typography in which complexity is all but impossible and meaninglessness reigns supreme. To the extent that ideas matter, we are no longer amusing ourselves to death. We are texting ourselves to death.

Ideas, of course, will survive, but more and more they will live at the margins of culture; more and more they will be a private reserve rather than a general fund. Meanwhile, everything at the cultural center militates against the sort of serious engagement that McLuhan described and that Postman celebrated.

McLuhan understood that print would eventually give way to electronic media, and that these new media would create his famous “global village,” though it is nevertheless ironic that typography, which he thought engendered isolation, would in digital form lead to tens of millions of people calling themselves “friends.”

Postman was more apocalyptic. He believed that a reading society was also a thinking society. No real reading, no real thought. Still, he couldn’t have foreseen that a reading society in which print that was overwhelmingly seamless, informal, personal, short et al would be a society in which that kind of reading would force thought out — a society in which tens of millions of people feel compelled to tell tens of millions of other people that they are eating a sandwich or going to a movie or watching a TV show. So Zuckerberg’s Revolution has a corollary that one might call Zuckerberg’s Law: Empty communications drive out significant ones.

Gutenberg’s Revolution left us with a world that was intellectually rich. Zuckerberg’s portends one that is all thumbs and no brains.

Source: http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-gabler-zuckerberg-20101128,0,7889675.story

1 December 2010 at 06:53 - Comments
Daniel
great post, thanks for sharing
17 December 10 at 20:21

Online networking ‘harms health’

Share on Twitter

Online networking ‘harms health’

People’s health could be harmed by social networking sites because they reduce levels of face-to-face contact, an expert claims (Dr Aric Sigman)

A lack of “real” social networking, involving personal interaction, may have biological effects, he suggests.

He also says that evidence suggests that a lack of face-to-face networking could alter the way genes work, upset immune responses, hormone levels, the function of arteries, and influence mental performance.

This, he claims, could increase the risk of health problems as serious as cancer, strokes, heart disease, and dementia.

Dr Sigman maintains that social networking sites have played a significant role in making people become more isolated.

“Social networking is the internet’s biggest growth area, particular among young children,” he said.

“Social networking sites should allow us to embellish our social lives, but what we find is very different. The tail is wagging the dog. These are not tools that enhance, they are tools that displace.”

Dr Sigman says that there is research that suggests the number of hours people spend interacting face-to-face has fallen dramatically since 1987, as the use of electronic media has increased.

And he claims that interacting “in person” has an effect on the body that is not seen when e-mails are written.

“When we are ‘really’ with people different things happen,” he said.

“It’s probably an evolutionary mechanism that recognises the benefits of us being together geographically.

“Much of it isn’t understood, but there does seem to be a difference between ‘real presence’ and the virtual variety.”

Dr Sigman also argues using electronic media undermines people’s social skills and their ability to read body language.

“One of the most pronounced changes in the daily habits of British citizens is a reduction in the number of minutes per day that they interact with another human being,” he said.

“In less than two decades, the number of people saying there is no-one with whom they discuss important matters nearly tripled.”

Dr Sigman says he is “worried about where this is all leading”.

He added: “It’s not that I’m old fashioned in terms of new technology, but the purpose of any new technology should be to provide a tool that enhances our lives.”

======================

A selection of your comments to the BBC news website:

I agree that I would prefer face to face contact with my friends and family, but as an immigrant to the UK who is separated from so many friends and family far away in another country and as a disabled person with a variable health condition that means that some days I am unable to get out of bed, the internet and social networking is a real life-line for me. Losing track of old friends can happen so easily. I’ve re-established many friendships this way. Morgan, Wales

Just a week ago I switched off my Facebook account for just this reason. These sites claim greater social networking, but all it really creates are more distractions for people, more isolation in front of their computers, more escapism, and a false sense of relationships with other people. People do not interact with each other properly, becoming more isolated and so more depressed. Travis, Germany

I don’t see this at all. For me, and I think a lot of people with Aspergers and other ADS’s, these sites make it easier to meet people. If anything you are meeting people who you might never have spoken to without meeting them online first.Chris, Kent

I can agree with some of this, if you are communicating with your neighbour by facebook then that is a problem. I live in Norway but I come from New Zealand, with facebook I can really be a part of my friends’ and family’s lives. I think it’s great, but in moderation.Simon, Norway

I live in a very rural community that unfortunately is seriously lacking in community spirit. There is very, very little to do and very little social interaction. I do not drive and I am home with small children. If it weren’t for Facebook I would feel even more isolated from society than I already am. Facebook reminds me that there are people out there who care about me, even though they may be people I grew up with that live thousands of miles away. Elizabeth, Shetland

I am a full-time wheelchair user and use social networking sites as it is not so easy for me to get out and meet people. However, I do agree with Dr Sigman and I am often aware of the need to get out and meet people rather than just type away to whoever chooses to read. I also think the quality of communication is affected; it’s all gossip and silly comments, hardly anything of substance. Much better talking to a good friend in confidence, in private, face to face. It’s more productive and in the long run more meaningful and good for well-being. Rachel, UK

I use most of the social networking sites that there are. I live in a small village where nobody talks to each other in person. I’ve tried everything to create human interaction and even done a School for Social Entrepreneurs Course to assist me in that but to no avail. I know that online friends are not the same but I am a single parent and not working. It is the only social interaction I can get to drive away the loneliness. When people are not online I miss them. Shona, Fife

I couldn’t agree more. I witness my 4 year old son and his 8 year old sister interact wonderfully when playing together, yet they become ‘withdrawn’ and subdued when playing solitary electronic games. Technology should enhance the human experience, but often fails to live up to its brief and actually causes more harm compared to when we did without. Mark.

I’m fed up with the number of people telling me I should join facebook. I have an active social life, I use phone and email to keep in touch and just can’t see the point of it all. If I want to keep in touch with friends I will, if I don’t I won’t so the argument that you can catch up with people that you haven’t seen for years is irrelevant to me. I even have a couple of friends who only send invites to their parties through facebook! I’m not a traditionalist at all, in fact quite the opposite, I just think the social networking fad is all a bit sad, I’d rather to go out and have fun with real people. Andrew, London

I used to use Facebook quite a lot. I had a lot of ‘friends’ on there. These were people who I knew ‘in real life’ and didn’t get a chance to see and speak to regularly, others were people I knew only in passing or as an acquaintance of other friends. I am not a social butterfly and I find making friends very difficult. But after some time I realised that I was spending more and more time altering my ‘status’ and logging into Facebook, than I was spending with actual real-life friends. I think the report cited is absolutely correct and there is an issue of people becoming distant from human contact. I think it is right that scientists are concerned about us becoming isolated from other human beings. I deactivated my Facebook account because I realised I was spending a lot of time with it which could be better spent elsewhere. C.A.D, UK

These health effects seems pretty far fetched to me. I am a retired teacher who loves Facebook. Surprisingly, I have been in contact with former students I had forty years ago. It is a wonderful tool. The health benefits to me have been wonderful. I am grateful for such services. Who would have ever thought so many former students would stop by my site and say hello? Richard, USA

I think it brings people together, in a sense that I communicate with people I wouldn’t even be interested to in real life. I have managed to get invites to social functions more than I did before. My social scene has in actual fact improved. Martha, SouthAfrica

The very best friends I have ever had in my life, I met online and this was before the social networking sites came to be. I’ve travelled to visit them and attended one of their weddings. Anything that helps people make friends is good and not harmful in my opinion. Mark, UK

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7898510.stm

2 November 2010 at 23:56 - Comments

ICANN to reconsider the .xxx domain registry

Share on Twitter

ICANN announced that it will take into consideration the plan for .xxx adult domain . A spokesman stated that this issue will be discussed on 12 March 2010.

ICANN will take another look at the proposal and it will be on the agenda at the meeting on Friday.”

ICANN had previously given the domain the go ahead in 2005, but reversed the decision two years later amidst protests from US conservative groups. An independent review recently concluded that decision was unfair and that the plan should be reconsidered.

The ICM Registry sent a letter to ICANN ,explaining the importance of .xxx domain names.

Stuart Lawley,chairman of ICM Registry stated that ” “ICM remains committed to the .xxx project, and is eager to work with ICANN to take the steps necessary to launch the new sponsored top-level domain and, in so doing, ensure that the results of the first-ever ICANN Independent Review Process are fully implemented in accordance with ICANN’s own core values of accountability, transparency and objectivity.”

.XXX domain names will be used only for adult websites.

It is in business terms major even, opening many opportunities for online business. When we look on history of domains such as sex.com where its generated in 1995 25 million hits a day with income from click-throughs and other advertising, reportedly $50,000 to $500,000 per month.

Sex.com was reported sold to Escom LLC in January 2006. At a reported $14 million price, the domain name has widely been cited as the highest priced domain sale.

As of February 18th,2010, the domain name has been ordered to be sold at a foreclosure auction.

Read more about role of ICANN here.

15 of March 2010
Page 78 in below deocument:
http://www.icann.org/en/irp/icm-v-icann/irp-panel-declaration-19feb10-en.pdf

Seems like its not gonna happen this time either…

======================

And there we are, few months after and there seems to be some progress happening. As I was informed by applicant ICM Registry, ICANN case is still in progress.

As per latest report from 26 March 2010 available here ICM Registry is still working to clarify approval process with ICANN. There are many issues highlighted during this process, like for example:

———

ICANN’s decision has important implications for Internet freedom of expression. While a .xxx domain is undeniably controversial, ICANN must guard against becoming a tool of those who wish to discourage or censor certain kinds of legal content. A TLD string should not be rejected simply because some people or some governments object to the types of content that might be associated with it. ICANN’s mandate to coordinate top level domain names cannot and should not become a mechanism for content regulation or censorship.

———

So still no final word in this case. According to information provided by ICM Registry latest requirements appointed by ICANN were rather regarding technical facilities then politics. But there seems to be true on both sides on this disputes. What do you think?

11 March 2010 at 22:30 - Comments

Marketing Trends 2010

Share on Twitter

First let me present word of Dr. Neil Hair » Marketing Trends 2010 and beyond.

Ive been presenting my ideas on Marketing Trends for 2010 for some time now to the great and good of Rochester. It’s proved a popular session that I’ve run at a number of local conferences and in the UK. One of the key issues I explore in this is the business case for online social networks, the role of virtual worlds in innovating the provision of service / customer experience, and how to build and maintain a personal brand in this new era. Towards the end of summer I will be presenting ‘Marketing Trends 2010′ to the Greater Rochester Area Partnership with the Elderly – looking specifically at how marketing trends affect the business of elderly care. As with my classes – one of the key outputs I use to judge the effectiveness of the presentation is the extent to which there are concrete take homes for participants to then act on. The benefits of experiential learning shouldn’t be the preserve of our students alone afterall. I also find it helps keep me honest – practitioners are always very quick to pick up on practical application, relevance and the measurement of the bottom line with my suggestions.

Well measuring trend from 2009 that seems to be correct. According to Nielson Online, Twitter alone grew 1,382% year-over-year in February, registering a total of just more than 7 million unique visitors in the US for the month. Meanwhile, Facebook continued to outpace MySpace. So what could social media look like in 2010? In 2010, social media will get even more popular, more mobile, and more exclusive — at least, that’s my guess. But I wouldn’t go so far. 2010 yes, will keep those trends, but similiar to web and web 2.0 social media will be changing and we will be wintessing another internet evolution.

What are the near-term trends we could see as soon as next year 2010?

1) Value is the new black

Consumer spending, even on sale items, will continue to be replaced by a “reason-to-buy at all”. This spells trouble for brands with no authentic meaning, whether high-end or low.

2) Brands increasingly a surrogate for “value”

The value of goods and services will increasingly be defined what’s wrapped up in the brand and what the brand stands for. For example, why J Crew instead of The Gap? J Crew stands for a new era in careful chic – being smart and stylish. The first family’s [the Obamas'] support of the brand doesn’t hurt either.

3) Brand differentiation is brand value

The unique meaning of a brand will increase in importance as generic features continue to plague the brand landscape. Awareness as a meaningful market force has long been obsolete, and differentiation will
be critical for success –meaning sales and profitability.

4) “Because I Said So” is so over

Brand values can be established as a brand identity, but they must believably exist in the mind of the consumer. A brand can’t just say it stands for something and make it so. The consumer will decide, making it more important than ever for a brand to have measures of authenticity that will aid in brand differentiation and consumer engagement.

5 ) Consumer expectations are growing

Brands are barely keeping up with consumer expectations now. Every day consumers adopt and devour the latest technologies and innovations and hunger for more. Smarter marketers will identify and capitalise on unmet expectations. Those brands that understand where the strongest expectations exist will be the brands that survive – and prosper.

6) Old tricks don’t work/won’t work anymore

In case your brand didn’t get the memo, here it is – consumers are on to brands trying to play their emotions for profit. In the wake of the financial debacle of this past year, people are more aware then ever of the hollowness of bank ads that claim “we’re all in this together” when those same banks have rescinded their credit and turned their retirement plan into case studies. The same is true for what are conceived to be insincere celebrity pairings: think Seinfeld & Microsoft or Tiger Woods & Buick. Celebrity values and brand values need to be in concert, like Tiger Woods & Accenture. That’s authenticity.

7) They won’t need to know you to love you

As the buying space becomes even more online-driven and international (and uncontrolled by brands and corporations), front-end awareness will become less important. A brand with the right street cred can go viral in days, with awareness following, not leading, the conversation. After all, everybody knows GM, but nobody’s buying their cars.

8 ) It’s not just buzz

Conversation and community is all; ebay thrives based on consumer feedback. If consumers trust the community, they will extend trust to the brand. Not just word of mouth, but the right word of mouth within the community. This means the coming of a new era of customer care.

9) They’re talking to each other before talking to the brand

Social networking and exchange of information outside of the brand space will increase. Look for more websites using Facebook Connect to share information with the friends from those sites. More companies will become members of Linkedin. Twitter users will spend more money on the internet than those who don’t tweet.

10) Engagement is not a fad; It’s the way today’s consumers do business

Marketers will come to accept that there are four engagement methods including Platform (TV; online), Context (Programme; webpage), Message (Ad or Communication), and Experience (Store/Event). But there is only one objective for the future: Brand Engagement. Marketers will continue to realise that attaining real brand engagement is impossible using out-dated attitudinal models.

The three most popular social networks for business in 2009:
1.LinkedIn

2.Facebook

3.Twitter

11 March 2010 at 00:13 - Comments