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WordCast Podcast: Doom and Gloom and Good Things in Web Publishing

The latest is out, WordCast Podcast 98: RIP Flip Cameras, Yahoo Buzz, and Google Video.

Dave, Kym, and I take a look at all the death around us lately in the social media and web publishing industry. We say good-bye to the Flip Camera, Yahoo Buzz, Google Video, and more gloom and doom.

On the bright side, we also look ahead to the living parts and pieces of WordPress, blogging, social media, and web publishing.

Listen Now:  Download this Podcast

SOBCon 2011: The Must Attend Online Business Conference

sobcon 2011Successful Online Business Conference (SOBCon 2011) is celebrating its fifth year as one of the most innovative and powerful online business conferences in the world.

April 29 – May 1, 2011, in Chicago, brings together 150 experts to learn from each other about the changing face of businesses, the virtual business world. Founders, and Terry Starbucker have gathered the brightest minds in the business web world, Cathy Brooks of Story Navigation, Derek Halpern of Social Triggers, Steve Farber, Carol Roth, Chris Brogan, Jodi Gersh of Gannett, Chris Gillebeau of The Art of Non-Conformity, Tim Sanders, author of three NY Times best selling books including “Today We Are Rich,” Michael Port, author of the NY Times bestseller, “Book Yourself Solid,” and more. Read more…

Epsilon Email Lists Breached: How to Protect Yourself

EpsilonThe news about the recent Epsilon email theft is a risk no one is immune from. While many are downplaying the security risks, take a look at the following list of companies whose information about you might have been stolen and could be used against you.

AbeBooks
Air Miles
Ameriprise Financial
BeachBody
Best Buy
Brookstone
Capital One
Chase Bank
Citi (Citibank/Citigroup)
Disney Destinations
Eddie Bauer
Eileen Fisher
Ethan Allen
Fry’s
Hilton
Home Shopping Network (HSN)
JP Morgan Chase
King Soopers
Kroger
Marriott Rewards
MoneyGram
QFC
Ralphs
Red Roof Inn
Ritz-Carlton Rewards
Target
Tastefully Simple
TD Ameritrade
The College Board
TiVo
US Bank
Walgreens

Actually, the list is much longer and includes some 5,900 colleges, universities, and schools to the over 40 million email addresses stolen from the Alliance Data Systems Corp. online marketing unit of Epsilon. If you signed up for a rewards card or store discount or membership card, and the odds are you have been sucked into those marketing ploys, your email and contact information is likely to be among the millions in untrustworthy hands. Read more…

Cheezburger Network Aquires Know Your Meme

The Cheezburger Network, famous for its user-generated blogs of internet “memes” like LOLCats and Fails, is in the news once again, this time for its acquisition of Know Your Meme, a blog dedicated to the explanation and tracking of those memes.

With their growing portfolio of sites, Cheezburger has created an incredible business model around quirky internet trends. However, the company, which recently received $30 million in venture capital, had “a vacuum in [its] publishing portfolio”, founder Ben Huh said. The network’s sites, which include the popular I Can Has Cheezburger? and FAIL Blog are some of the most visited destinations for the trends they follow. However, there was very little explanation of the stories behind those trends. With this acquisition, they hope to fill that gap.

The deal is rumored to be in the low seven figures. Check out the newly Cheezburger-ized Know Your Meme, then post your thoughts about the deal in the comments!


“Right to Forget” for the Social Web Debated

The United Kingdom and the European Union continue to lead the way with ground breaking laws to protect social media consumers, while also changing your rights online.

We reported in February about how the UK ruled that Twitter messages are public, therefore usable by newspapers for publishing without permission.

In the past week, members of the EU are debating over what is being called the “Right to Forget” law. Read more…

Apple Resists Pleas to Remove Anti-Gay App

According to Mashable, hundreds of thousands of people want Apple to shut down “Gay Cure” App in the Apple Store.

More than 100,000 people have signed an online petition calling for Apple to remove an app from the iTunes store that was created by an anti-gay Christian organization. Exodus International, which according to its website has ministries that “provide support for individuals who want to recover from homosexuality,” released the app on February 15.

The app has a 4+ approval rating from the Apple app store, and the organization is quick to point out that this rating is reserved for those apps that “contain no objectionable material.”

Gay rights activists obviously disagree.

The petition started by the by non-profit LBGT advocacy organization Truth Wins Out called Change.org petition states that their message is “hateful and bigoted” claiming a cure through the Christian faith.

Previous attempts at anti-gay apps have been shut down by Apple, so time will tell if the ground swell will result in similar action, though Apple has taken no response to date.

The Fine Line Between Snark and Boring: TechCrunch and The Source Code

In a review of TechCrunch’s recent “snarky” remarks about the marketing behind the new movie, Source Code, which permired this past week at SxSW, Sady Doyle of the Guardian has a few things to say about how “bloggers must be free to call a buzzwordgasm a buzzwordgasm:”

Reader, prepare yourself: Someone on the internet thinks Source Code looks silly. Source Code, of course, is a movie that premiered at South by Southwest last weekend, and which stars Jake Gyllenhaal as a man who must relive a train wreck over and over again, in the hope of changing its outcome…

Consider Alexia Tsotis, a TechCrunch blogger called upon to cover the movie’s premiere. Her piece focused on the movie’s marketing, described as a “cross-platform, trans-media campaign” involving “social media game play”. This amounts to asking people to promote the movie on Facebook; Tsotis noted that, and joked about it, calling the above-quoted hype a “buzzwordgasm”. At which point, the trans-media cross-platform marketers at Summit found a whole new use for the internet: contacting AOL, the company that owns TechCrunch, to suggest that Tsotis change her piece.

…it’s also true that bloggers are frequently called upon to cover extremely silly and inconsequential things. To discuss the bold new marketing innovation of “making people talk about a movie on Facebook” with a straight face, especially when that movie is a Groundhog Day remake with slightly more train explosions, is a bit too much to ask for. Without at least some acknowledgment of the ridiculousness at hand, the writer risks turning in an article that is little more than a press release. Without snark, Tsotis’s piece wouldn’t be cruel. It would be something even worse: boring.

Alexia Tsotis’ article on TechCrunch created a a lot of controversy about its review approach, targeting the marketing instead of the movie itself, which appears to be more exciting than the movie itself. Read more…

Man Arrested for Embedding and Linking to Copyrighted Videos

Earlier this month, the website channelsurfing.net, previously home to a directory of recordings of television programs and sporting events hosted on third party video sharing sites, was shut down and had its domain name seized by the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The site’s owner, Bryan McCarthy, was arrested and is now facing up to five years in prison after being accused by the DHS of copyright violations.

According to federal authorities, Bryan McCarthy had made more than $90,000 in profits from selling advertising space on his website, which has received over 1.3 million visitors just in the time since it was seized. The website had been in operation for over five years, but was shut down as part of an ongoing investigation into websites that illegally streamed copyrighted sporting telecasts and pay-per-view events.

Since McCarthy’s arrest, a backlash has been seen from various individuals and organizations online, who see ChannelSurfing as a falling domino in a continued loss of internet freedoms. Read more…

Cattle Rustling on the Internet

Cattle Rustling, selling stolen cows on Craig's ListI thought the world was already too crazy to believe. Space Shuttle Discovery is on its last flight home with no replacement and many giving up on space travel because they can’t see the economy benefits, especially with the economy in the hole. The uprising in Libya continues, driving oil prices, thus gas, up to USD $4.00 or more, and is now into day four of a total Internet block, with little or no information coming out. Countries around the world are debating making an Internet kill-switch of their own legal, following recent Middle East and Asian examples.

Florida workers are joining Wisconsin union workers to protest the attacks on unions at a time when people are desperate for work…and now news from Oregon Public Radio reports that the bad economy combined with the high price of beef, associated with the rising fuel prices, is leading to an increase in cattle rustling involving Craig’s List and other social media tools. Cattle rustling? On Facebook? Twitter?

Huffman says with the down economy there’s plenty of motivation to steal cattle. And with more livestock sales happening on the Internet now rustlers are becoming harder to track. He says thieves regularly sell spring calves on sites like Craig’s List.

Roger Huffman: “I could put an ad out there today, and if it’s priced right I could get a call, I could sell it to them, they come pick it up, I could remove my ad and in several hours it’s gone. They’ve paid me cash and they’re gone and the ad is removed off the air so there’s no record of it.”

Read more…

Turkey Bans Blogger/Blogspot – Again

Google Blogger Banned in TurkeyIn 2007, the government and legal system of Turkey banned over a “defamer of Islam” and Turkey with a blog on . You would think that after all the fuss, of which there was actually little, they would have learned from their lessons that you can’t go about banning all sites and blogs just because of the actions of one person.

According to the BBC, Turkey still hasn’t learned the lesson, having just banned all of Google Blogger/Blogspot blogs for the sake of a copyright complaint by a satellite TV company, Digiturk, about their televised football (soccer) matches featured on a few Blogspot blogs.

About 600,000 Turkish bloggers are thought to use the Google tool to publish their personal journals. The ban has been imposed because Turkey’s copyright protection laws allow for entire services to be shut down.

In October, 2010 Turkey lifted a ban on YouTube that had been in place for two years.

Google confirmed the Blogger ban in a statement and said those with worries about piracy should turn to its easy to use takedown systems rather than seek a wholesale shutdown. “The process for making a copyright claim for content uploaded to Blogger is straightforward and efficient, and we encourage all content owners to use it rather than seek a broad ban on access to the service,” said a spokesperson. “That way, people in Turkey can continue to enjoy Blogger whilst we respond to the specific complaint.”

Digiturk said it went to court to protect its right to broadcast Turkey’s Spor Toto Super League games on its Lig channel. Digiturk said the ban had not curbed all piracy as other sites beyond Blogger were still showing pirated streams of football matches.

The Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review reported that many are protesting this blockage: Read more…

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