Tag Archives: Users

Is the privacy dead, then why are you talking about it

Google and Facebook almost hint the death of the privacy dead, but is it really and if it is dead then why are they talking about is. Bruce Schneier on Forbes talks about this Google And Facebook’s Privacy Illusion:

In January Facebook Chief Executive, Mark Zuckerberg, declared the age of privacy to be over. A month earlier, Google Chief Eric Schmidt expressed a similar sentiment. Add Scott McNealy’s and Larry Ellison’s comments from a few years earlier, and you’ve got a whole lot of tech CEOs proclaiming the death of privacy–especially when it comes to young people.

It’s just not true. People, including the younger generation, still care about privacy. Yes, they’re far more public on the Internet than their parents: writing personal details on Facebook, posting embarrassing photos on Flickr and having intimate conversations on Twitter. But they take steps to protect their privacy and vociferously complain when they feel it violated. They’re not technically sophisticated about privacy and make mistakes all the time, but that’s mostly the fault of companies and Web sites that try to manipulate them for financial gain.

Bruce Schneier is a security technologist and the Chief Security Technology Officer of BT. You can read more of his writing at www.schneier.com. Recently he gave a talk on on "Security, Privacy, and the Generation Gap", the video of which is available here.

 

From web users to web curators & it’s importance for media

We have all moved from just web presence to commenting, liking and sharing everything online – from users to curators. Social web helps us become the keepers of our culture, trends, create photo galleries, bookmark fun stuff, pass on knowledge, popularize hit videos and more. Whenever we click on comment, like or share on facebook or RT on twitter we are becoming content specialist slow and steady.

This is our primal instinct to hunt and collect things. We pride ourselves to showcase our collection to the world, spread our ideas, seek comments and appreciation. This is what the social web enables us.

Lighspeed has an interesting post on Social Media’s 3 classes: Creators, Curators and Consumers. This article goes on to explain the 3 classes and here’s what it says about the curators.

Curators tie these two groups together (Creators & Consumers). Not all content that the Creators create is of equal quality, and the Curators perform an important filtering function to bubble the best content to the top, hence keeping the Consumers happy, engaged, and coming back. Curators use the mouse. They click to vote/digg/rate. These actions are what give the Creators the attention and affirmation that they are looking for.

It’s important to make it very easy for Curators to give their feedback. This means making the feedback process as close to frictionless as possible. The feedback mechanism should be immediately adjacent to the content that is being rated. Such clicks should be part of rich internet application, and not take you to another page – there should be no “wait time” penalty for providing curator feedback as they wait for a page to load. Ideally, it will not require registration, or registration will be kept as light as possible. Since Curators use the mouse, avoid them from having to touch a keyboard as much as possible.

In an another piece from Steve Rubel "The Digital Curator in Your Future", he talks about how the digitial curators work in the digitil realm

Much the same, the digital realm too needs curators. Information overload makes it difficult to separate junk from art. It requires a certain finesse and expertise – a fine tuned, perhaps trained eye. Google, memetrackers such as Techmeme and social news sites like digg are not curators. They’re aggregators – and there’s a big difference.

The call of the curator requires people who are selfless and willing to act as sherpas and guides. They’re identifiable subject matter experts who dive through mountains of digital information and distill it down to its most relevant, essential parts. Digital Curators are the future of online content. Brands, media companies and dedicated individuals can all become curators. Further, they don’t even need to create their own content, just as a museum curator rarely hangs his/her own work next to a Da Vinci. They do, however, need to be subject matter experts.

There’s also a suggestion for MSM "Journalists need to stop thinking exclusively like content creators and start acting also as content curators" – Tim Windsor .And more such recommendations from  JP Rangaswami and Scott Karp

 

Crowdsourced Curation : Comment | Like | Share – RT #tags and more…

The common tools on social web platforms is already helping us become the curators. We may not be expert curators but collective activities of crowd or mass surely helps in bringing up the best of the collection and connect creators with consumers.

On social web it’s infact the switching of roles which makes it even more interesting, the consumer becomes the curator unknowingly. Sometimes just by forwarding it to the right person or adding a very important meta data and enhancing the original creation.

If you browse through the profiles of friends and professionals connection on facebook, linkedin, twitter and so on, you also traverse through the massive collection of their likes, dislikes, environment, society, country and the industries that they represent. That’s also the reason why time spent on these properties is increasing and would continue to do so.

The best example of this would be the blogosphere where a) blogs and blogrolls and b) blog post, inter links and trackbacks exhibit this mass collection, filtering and curation. Microblogging made it more easy with with easy 140 character posts, RTs and hashtags. Trending topics on Twitter is precisely this.

The Status Updates or Tweets is all about “Hey, Look at my collection”. User doesn’t have an investment in your property or content, whereas the curator is almost showing the ownership and takes pride in it.

From MSM point of view we really need to think hard are we allowing the users to become the curators.

  • Are we allowing them to collect our content or media and make their own sense out of it
  • Is the content valuable enough for them to care and share
  • Are there enough transport mechanism for them to share it with the world
  • Are they volunteering for you, are you allowing them to graduate beyond readers/consumers to fans/caretakers.
  • Remember they act as the connectors and bridge between creators and consumers. How many bridges have your created ?

The platforms are already there, are you participating ? There’s walled garden, no more…

Heavy Bloggers Are Heavy Web Consumers Too

Via Clement James : ComScore Segment Metrix study find out that bloggers are heavy consumers of content at news and entertainment web sites. Well this is no suprise to me. Just look at the top 100 blogs, they all need to be informed on so much of stuff. I am a pathetic blogger and my domain is so specific but still I consumer more than 100+ RSS feeds and I can’t even imagine how these people must be keeping track of things.

As blogs continue to grow in both quality and audience size, both traditional and non-traditional advertisers are increasingly putting their online ad dollars towards reaching this group of consumers

Online advertisers put their money where they have the target audience and blogs provide the avenue for target users. Top 3 blogs on technorati – techcrunch, engadget and gizmodo are such TG & niche audience examples. You cannnot get a better place for excellent conversion rates on anything related to web or gadgets.

Heavy Bloggers are Heavy Consumers of News and Entertainment Content

Given that blogs can often be described as both informative and entertaining, it is not surprising that heavy users of blog sites are more likely than the average Internet user to consume news and entertainment content online. They are significantly more likely to consume content at politics and general news sites, and also consume a disproportionate amount of content on entertainment news, humor, movies and photo-sharing sites.

Why else do you need the RSS for ?. RSS has become the standard transport for all these buzz finders, delivered through personal pages at live.com, topical news homes like popurl and alltop or collection of hand-picked sites on personal rss readers. They hunt for buzz on places like Digg or PerezHilton and manage the hosting of content through RapidShare and MegaUplaod.

The ripple doesn’t stop here:One thing this study doesn’t talk about is the ripple effect created by the blog or more commonly used ‘slashdot effect’. The content consumed by the bloggers doesn’t stay with the bloggers, it gets passed on to their readers, get circulated on the other blogs and their readers and while this is all happening the cross linking creates a unique mesh starting from the origin of the content. So heavy bloggers are also the distributors of the content and give the tremendous amount of reach to these news and entertainment sites which was never possible earlier.

What I would like to know:

  • How this ripples are created, is the ripple more powerful at the source or it gets more powerful at the second or the third level where it starts from sites like techcrunch, digg or slashdot.
  • This ripple of course not a uni-directional, is there a reverse ripple ?Who gets benefitted the most ? the source where the content originated or the distributors who spread the content.