Right to Censor

Hey everybody, this seems to be the last blog for me, as everybody is moving onto the Baruch Blogs Down group on Facebook. Since we are making the transition from Blogs@Baruch to Facebook, like the DTV transition, here’s an interesting article about Youtube being banned in China.

China is known for censoring material that does not give them a positive image or support their policies. It seems like a group of Dalai Lama supporters faked a police beating on Youtube, and this video has caused China to effectively block Youtube alltogether. Mr. Xiao isn’t surprised that Youtube is being blocked, because it allows video of protests in Tiananmen Square, and other videos that may clash with Chinese policies.

Catch the rest of this article at: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/25/techno…

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Class Blog

Could you put instructions on how to access:

baruch blogs down!

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Cisco: PC Rival?

Midterm is finally done for me, so I can go back to blogging. It’s been a while, but I caught this article earlier today and thought it was very interesting. Cisco is known for designing and selling networking and communications technology and services. However, it has decided to venture into the computer market.

Check out the article, as Cisco CEO John T. Chalmers states, it’s time to get aggressive.

 http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/17/techno…

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Facebook’s New Public Profiles: Good for Businesses, Bad for People

Is this true? What do you guys think?
I guess most of us had tried the new version of facebook so far.

Personally, I just wonder how many more change will facebook be bringing us in the future.
And, if the changes are made for user friendly or not.

http://www.nytimes.com/external/readwriteweb/2009/03/13/13readwriteweb-facebooks_new_public_profiles_good_for_businesses.html

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A Call to Legislate Internet Privacy

Something important which we might want to keep our eyes on too.
Guess we will be tracking this debate to see what will actually happen!

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/13/a-call-to-legislate-internet-privacy/

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Growing Up on Facebook

Will facebook be adapting into one of our life trends in the coming future?
It’s going into everywhere globally!

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/15/magazine/15wwln-lede-t.html?_r=1&ref=internet

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The Broadband Gap: Why Do They Have More Fiber? [3]

another update on another perspective~

not sure how many will be interested in, but it’s good for those who had been follow along!

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/12/the-broadband-gap-why-do-they-have-more-fiber/?ref=internet

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The Broadband Gap: Why Is Theirs Cheaper? [2]

as a continuous to the previous post~

viewing on another perspective*

http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/11/why-is-their-broadband-cheaper/

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Google’s Next Step: World Domination?

It seems like every other day Google has some sort of new trick up its never-ending sleeves.

Google announced a new service called Google Voice. It is determined to be the communication hub for everyone.

It provides a centralized number for all calls and SMS, call screening, call forwarding, multiple phone support, recording, voice transcripts and more… all for free!

I personally think this is a very interesting service that is bound to attract many users. However, Google will probably find a way to get some sort of advertising in it so that it can earn revenue. This service will probably also raise lots of privacy concerns in connection with its phone recording and transcript features.

At this time, the service is not yet open to new or current Google users.

via Google Voice

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another facebook change

Facebook has changed their page layout, AGAIN. And once again, many people don’t like the new look and wishes Facebook can stop changing it.

But on a positive note, Facebook is using real-time stream for posts. They are catching up with time.

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Possible AOL revival?

Everyone knows AOL has been doing poorly over the last few years. I personally don’t even know of a single person that uses any of its services anymore.

Well, there might just be hope. Google’s senior vice president, Tim Armstrong, has been named chairman and CEO of the troubled AOL, effective immediately.

via AOL Gets a New CEO: Google Sales Boss Tim Armstrong (Plus the Whole Press Release)

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The Broadband Gap: Why Is Theirs Faster? [1]

I had knew that there are countries that have cheaper and faster broadband than any of those that are offered in USA. I also wonder why would this happen in USA, a country which many view as one of the pioneers in the technology advances. What do you guys think?

 http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/10…

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Better Search Doesn’t Mean Beating Google

There’s a new search engine called Wolfram Alpha created by Stephen Wolfram, a British mathematician.

There are some downturns about this new search which it can’t compete with Google.

 http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/09…

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Get Them When They Are Young

Universal Music Group partners with Kiwibox, a social networking portal for teens. 2.4 million of Kiwibox members will have access to more than 5,000 UMG music videos. This union looks very promising in terms of advertising and promotional opportunities, considering that the entire Kiwibox Teen ad network, which consists of more than 75 sites, reaches almost 15 million users per month.

Later this year, Kiwibox will launch sponsored music players that could be added to Facebook or MySpace pages.

Via DMNews.

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Restaurant vs Yelp: Round Two

This is an update to the earlier post.

A San-Francisco restaurant decided to beat Yelp in its own game after an unsuccessful attempt to debate and remove the unflattering comments from Yelp website . The employees of Pizzeria Delphina got new uniforms – t-shirts with negative reviews from the website. T-shirts messages vary from “Not great at all.  The only reason I’m giving them 2 stars is because they give you your left overs in really great pizza boxes with their name on it” to “The pizza was soooo greasy.  I am assuming this was in part due to the pig fat.  A rather large puddle of grease actually pooled on my friends plate.” Business is booming at Pizzeria Delphina, and other SF restaurateurs may follow the trend.

via NYT.

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watchmen on facebook

Many companies including the entertainment industry are very smart on promoting their products and spreading the world by using Facebook. In Facebook there is an application where you can send out gifts (an icon picture) by attaching it to a message that you want to post on a friends wall. Such as a birthday cake for someone’s birthday, a rose for Valentine’s Day and etc. However, these gifts require you to buy gift credits, which most people would rather not spend their money on. However, there have been companies such as Honda, Covergirl, Careerbuilder who allows you give out a free gift that is some what related to their product or company. And now there is Watchmen the movie. Letting you have the chance to give free gift to your friends make you and your friends happy. At the same time, you are helping to promote their new product and company.

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Apple: Refreshed

Yesterday, Apple Computer refreshed its lineup of computers (Mac mini, iMac, Mac Pro and MacBook Pro) and networking products (AirPort Extreme and Time Capsule) by updating their specs and/or lowering prices.

I still haven’t purchased a Mac computer yet but some of these products look mighty tempting. =X

via Apple morning roundup, few Mac products left unscathed

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Nielsen Online Knows What You Did This January…

As documented in their recent survey, you, my fellow average online American, did the following in January ‘09:

  • went online 62 times
  • visited 115 domains
  • viewed 2,580 web pages
  • spent nearly 75 hours online

Probably, you did some other stuff, too, but it didn’t make the report.

Via MarketingVOX.

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Social Media FTW

According to a recently released study, social media has been going through the stage of exceptional growth for the last three years. The number of users of social media websites has reached 105 million. More details and stat data for those who are interested are here.

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User Reviews vs Business Interests?

Check the NYT article about Yelp, a website that provides ratings of local businesses. While user-generated reviews and recommendations are very important in e-marketing, there are some flaws and imperfections in this system as well. What to do with false reviews? How to maintain good business reputation? How to deal with often conflicting interests of consumers and business owners? To find answers to these questions please click here.

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Product Ads on Amazon

Amazon added new advertising feature, Product Ads on Amazon, that allows e-vendors to promote their own websites on Amazon.Advertisers pay per click-through and prices run from $0.15 to $1.25 per click.

More details @MarketingVOX.

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Hello world!


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Facebook Tries to Become a Democracy

New York Times

February 26, 2009, 3:15 pm

Facebook Tries to Become a Democracy

Facebook

A week after its community erupted in protest over changes to its terms of service that appeared to give it control over its users’ information, Facebook announced Thursday that all significant policy changes on the site would be subject to comments from members and, if they prove controversial, a popular vote.

Most immediately, Facebook will open a dialogue with users over a set of principles, or “foundational elements for how we want to govern the site,” said Mark Zuckerberg, the company’s founder and chief executive. Users will have the opportunity over the next 30 days to comment and vote on these principles, which are posted in a document that tries to harness some of the verbal eloquence of a governing constitution.

“If we are trying to move the world to being more open and transparent and to get people to share more information, having an open process around this is ultimately the only way to do that,” Mr. Zuckerberg said in a conference call with journalists.

In making this change, Facebook is conceding again that it goofed with its new terms of service and needs to play closer attention to users.

“I think we really underestimated the sense of ownership Facebook users feel over the site,” said Elliot J. Schrage, Facebook’s vice president of communications and public policy. “Because of the information they post and share, the personal nature of that information, they want to feel a real strong sense of ownership over what happens.”

Significantly, the company is reserving the right to roll out new features without consulting its members, so it is not clear just how meaningful all this is. But here are two of the more interesting principles Facebook is proposing to its users:

Ownership and Control of Information: “People should own their information. They should have the freedom to share it with anyone they want and take it with them anywhere they want, including removing it from the Facebook Service. People should have the freedom to decide with whom they will share their information, and to set privacy controls to protect those choices. Those controls, however, are not capable of limiting how those who have received information may use it, particularly outside the Facebook Service.”

Transparent Process: “Facebook should publicly make available information about its purpose, plans, policies, and operations. Facebook should have a town hall process of notice and comment and a system of voting to encourage input and discourse on amendments to these Principles or to the Rights and Responsibilities.”

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Search for Local Business Services, Mainly Online

Remember the times when Yellow Pages were the one and the only – ok, maybe not the only, but definitely the one – way to advertise your business? Till recently, its popularity and authority remained unchallenged: even last year, Yellow Pages was the crowned winner with 33% of customers using it for the search of local business services, followed by the first runner-up – search engines – with 30% of the vote. It’s really surprising, considering the ever-growing popularity of online marketing. However, according to TMP Directional Marketing second annual Local Search Consumer Usage Study, search engines now have a lead over print Yellow Pages- 31% vs 30%. According to the report, search engines, combined with Internet Yellow Pages and local search sites (i.e. Google Maps and Yahoo Local), now account for 61% of searching for local business services. To access the report, click here.

MarketingVOX has some helpful hints for business owners on optimizing their online listings.

UPDATE:

And yet another cheerful study on online ad market.

Posted in Uncategorized, Yellow Pages, consumer study, search engines | Leave a comment

Retail Ads Decline in Q1

A new study announces the results of Q1 for retail industry. With global economy going further into decline, retail sector keeps cutting ad budgets because of the competitive pressures, fewer searches, and decline in sales per click among other reasons. For more details and report findings, go to Marketing Pilgrim.

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Yahoo Partners with Newspapers

This partnership allows newspapers to place ads on their own websites and Yahoo website. Introduced in 2006, this alliance was originally focused on sharing the classified ads, but this concept has evolved since then. Now participating newspapers can sell ads aimed at specific target groups. Additionally, newspapers can place ads on Yahoo website as well which helps advertisers to reach broader audience. To read the full NYT article, please click here.

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments closed

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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Site Layouts

So I’ve finally found a couple of minutes to blog, and its not as bad as i though. Today in class we mentioned website layouts, and how they affect our perception of the sites we view. We didn’t really get to talk about this but I think its an important factor as well – the layout also effects how we feel about the source or the credibility of the websites we are looking at. We used as an in class for example a couple of college websites including our own Baruch College website (which i happened to like the best a bias reason….because I’m on it!).

(Haha yeah I know it was tacky! what do you expect its my call to fame!!)

For those of us who have been here long enough – im sure you remember how crummy and tough to navigate the old baruch site was….not to mention it was not graced with my picture, but thats besides the point. The school took the time to revamp its webpage for some more appeal and from what I remember most students were happy with the change….but I guess New York is a constantly changing town- nobody wants to keep seeing the same site over and over again and would like some variety because we get bored of seeing the same thing over and over again. We also mentioned in class how these pictures show a message, and using the picture above, this mesage is that we are a diverse group of people who are having fun, and thats the message the school wants to send out to its students, faculty, alumni and future students.

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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Kindle 2.0 Has Arrived

To read about new features and what’s in the cards for this and any other e-book reader, click here.

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E-Commerce FTW

While we may be in a recession, any type of good news is welcomed by any company. Although GAP had a terrible 2008, it can be thankful for passing a pretty impressive milestone. Their online business managed to surpass one billion dollars in sales for the first time ever. This can be due to linking all of their different stores together on one site. Here’s the article.

 http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/02/23…

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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For All Gossip Girl Fans Out There;-)

No, really:-)

This is a great example of viral marketing.

Taken from DMNews. In case you want to go straight to the article, click here.

XOXO

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More Emails, More Purchases

According to a survey from Epsilon and conducted by ROI research, emails actually enforce the positive image of the companies sending them and exactly half of the consumers would be more likely to purchase items from these companies. The full article is here.

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Technology and Google find Atlantis…Can this really be?

After reading an article in the Times called  “Fabled City of Atlantis Spotted on Google Earth?,” it’s scary to think that an internet application could actually locate something mythical. The google application, Google Earth has given Internet users the ability to literally see everything and anything in the world. Through satellites, images of different locations are captured and delivered to computers all over the world.  Who even needs National Geographic, or even the Discovery Channel. What used to be foreign is no longer.

As described in the article,  Google Earth has  led to the discovery of various unknown frontiers “including a pristine forest in Mozambique that is home to previously unknown species and the remains of an ancient Roman villa.” The software has also found a “Mysterious grid of undersea lines…spotted off the western coast of Africa.” Coincidentally these lines are  linked to the “location” of the lost city. What’s amazing about this “quasi- discovery” is the fact that people interested in the finding can actually see for themselves by just typing in the location. They can see for themselves.

Google representatives claim that the located patterns are caused by sonar from boats measuring sea floor terrain. Whether we are one step closer to Atlantis or just leanring to understand technology, its definitely amazing to see just how far technology really has gone.  What’s next, an application to find aliens?

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.tel ~ new domain?

came across with this which I had not hear about [maybe some of you knew already]

but what is “.tel”? [it's more than just a domain name!]

.tel is a top-level domain (TLD) approved by ICANN as a sponsored TLD and operated by Telnic.

Its advertised purpose is as a single management and publishing point for “internet communication” services, providing a global contacts directory service by housing all types of contact information directly in the Domain Name System(DNS).

fap —> http://telnic.org/faq.html

to sign up for —> http://marketing.networksolutions.com/dms/09Q1/dotTEL/

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Social Media Minute [2.19.09]

an article or site which I found interesting to read about different social media online~

article —> http://www.cmswire.com/cms/social-media/the-social-media-minute-19-feb-09-003991.php

a few excerpts which I think are interesting:::

A.  Orkut is India’s Most Popular Social Network — comScore

If we think of social network start-ups as social experiments, and why wouldn’t we, then if Facebook is Athenian democracy (admittedly a stretch), and if MySpace is the Enlightenment (stretchier yet), then we might liken Google Orkut to Mao’s Cultural Revolution.

By which we mean that we’ve always thought of it as a bloody and gruesome Social disaster, just in case you didn’t get that subtle analogy.

But we may have to revise that view, because the vast and growing Indian market can’t get enough of Orkut, and comScore’s latest figures state that it is in fact the most-visited social network in India, in a market that drew 18m viewers in December 2008 alone.

comScore’s report on India’s 2008 figures is arresting. Internet audience as a whole rose by a fifth, while social network audience grew by 50%. Facebook, BharatStudent, Hi5 and ibibo make up the rest of India’s top five social networking  sites. MySpace and Linkedin limp in at numbers 6 and 7.

B. Facebook Climbs Down in “Terms of Service” Row

A modification to Facebook’s Terms of Service agreement for new members brought a storm of controversy last week. A line of the old stock agreement was erased, which had stated that Facebook could not claim any rights to a user’s content after he or she had closed their account.

The line was replaced with: “You may remove your User Content from the Site at any time. … (H)owever, you acknowledge that the Company may retain archived copies of your User Content.”

The Consumerist  led the charge against Facebook over the new agreement, Chris Walters summing up the new deal like this: “Make sure you never upload anything you don’t feel comfortable giving away forever, because it’s Facebook’s now.”

Walters’ post burned down the server, grabbing over 6,000 Diggs in about a day, and no fewer than 64,000 Facebook users signed an online petition to have the new TOS changed back to its original form. Facebook saw the writing on the wall, and Mark Zuckerburg caved and pledged to go back to the original terms “…while we resolve the issues that people have raised.”

C. Yammer Launches Downloadable Version

Yammer, the popular enterprise-oriented microblogger , has just launched a downloadable version which you can upload to your own server space.

The service at Yammer.com works perfectly well for closed groups, so why would enterprises and organizations bother setting up their own implementations on their  own servers? Our own Jason Harris explains:
“ For many reasons, but primarily because many enterprises maintain IS security policies that all corporate communications are held on corporate servers. While using Yammer in a traditional manner, users store microblogging messages on Yammer’s servers. Under this arrangement, potentially sensitive and confident information might seep out into just anyone’s hands, causing unease in the information security fields.”

Your own private Yammer will cost you US$1 per user per month. The new product announcement comes less than a month after Yammer secured US$5m in funding.

D. One in Ten Internet Users Now on Twitter

Speaking of arresting figures, here’s another one: a tenth of the men, women and children in the United States who use the Internet have used Twitter. The figure  comes courtesy of Pew Internet & American Life Project (PIP), which asked a sample in December 2008 whether they had used a microblogger “like Twitter”, and 11% replied in the affirmative. The  number who had used a microblogger back in May 2008 was 6%.

Chelsi Nakano has the full story.

Twitter Launches Integrated Search and Trends

Ever since Twitter bought out Summize last summer  search.twitter.com),   they haven’t done a whole lot to integrate search and other cool related features like hot hashtag topics into the main site. Until now.

Mashable reports hat a new version of Twitter.com which incorporates search and trends is being tested on a small group of users. Expect your Twitter.com page to change substantially some time over the next couple of months.

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Facebook’s News

Facebook’s Users Ask Who Owns Information

article —> http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/17/technology/internet/17facebook.html?_r=1&scp=3&sq=facebook&st=cse

something related to what we had discussed in class on thursday~

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments closed

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments closed

Akismet Spam?! and facebook..

Well i already got my first akismet spam, and I barely wrote anything. Well I want to thank Akismet for a job well done. I hope tomorrow I don’t get any messages from myspace ladies from china who are a 100 years old…

On Tuesday morning, I read about facebook and how they were changing their terms of service. The thing was nobody knew about it, until Consumerist.com, a consumer rights advocacy blog pointed it out. Apparently there was a suggestion that Facebook owns all your content even AFTER you deleted your account. Well, I got this article from Yahoo Tech, which states that anybody who logged in to Facebook yesterday would receive a message that they decided to revert to the original terms of service, for now.

Here’s link to article.

 http://tech.yahoo.com/news/ap/20090218/a…

I for one havent been too happy with facebook lately, but where am i to go?

Sconex…oh wait never mind.

Posted in General | Comments closed

O Romeo, Romeo! wherefore art thou Romeo?

Oh there you are!

The internet created a new era of information sharing. Now mobile computing has taken it to another level. Just how much information are you willing to share? Nearly all cell phones have location services built in for emergency purposes, but who is to stop marketers from targeting potential customers. Can your service provider sell your location to advertisers? These are issues to come, and soon perhaps. Terms of service contracts are often intended to bore and confuse the average user, and it works. How many have you read? Think about this next time you open Google maps on your phone!

New York Times Article

Posted in cell phone, geo-tagging, marketing, privacy | Comments closed

Nice to meet you all*

Hi, nice to meet you all! I am Lily.

Hope that I will get use to this blog and set things up*

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments closed

(N) News for facebook -it owns everything we have on our account

source-http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,494064,00.html

Facebook Membership May Be Forever

Tuesday, February 17, 2009


Once a Facebook member, always a member.

The Consumerist blog noticed Sunday that the social-networking giant had quietly made a change to its user Terms of Service (TOS) on Feb. 4.

Facebook now declares that it has a perpetual license to use anything you post to your own Facebook page — even if you terminate your account.

Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg defended the change as necessary in a blog posting Monday afternoon.

• Click here for the Consumerist blog posting.

• Click here for Mark Zuckerberg’s response.

• Click here for the new Facebook Terms of Service.

• Click here for the old Facebook Terms of Service.

• Click here for FOXNews.com’s Personal Technology Center.

Here’s the licensing part of the legalese, which sounds bad enough:

“You hereby grant Facebook an irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, fully paid, worldwide license (with the right to sublicense) to (a) use, copy, publish, stream, store, retain, publicly perform or display, transmit, scan, reformat, modify, edit, frame, translate, excerpt, adapt, create derivative works and distribute (through multiple tiers), any User Content you (i) Post on or in connection with the Facebook Service or the promotion thereof subject only to your privacy settings or (ii) enable a user to Post, including by offering a Share Link on your website and (b) to use your name, likeness and image for any purpose, including commercial or advertising, each of (a) and (b) on or in connection with the Facebook Service or the promotion thereof.”

Related Stories

In other words, while it doesn’t actually own your photos, scribblings and status updates — you do — Facebook can do whatever it wants with it, whenever it wants, in order to promote itself or create or sell ads.

Theoretically, it can even “license” a picture of your kids for use in a third party’s ad campaign.

Most of that has been part of the Facebook Terms of Service for a while. After all, without user-generated content, Facebook would be nothing.

What’s been removed is this: “If you choose to remove your User Content, the license granted above will automatically expire, however (sic) you acknowledge that the Company may retain archived copies of your User Content.”

And what’s been added is this: “The following sections will survive any termination of your use of the Facebook Service” — after which follows a list of most of the sections on the Terms of Service page.

So even if you decide Facebook isn’t for you, the site can still use anything you posted. It’s all been archived.

“I’m done with Facebook,” declared blogger Ed Champion upon learning of the TOS changes.

He seemed more annoyed at the older blanket license than the new never-say-die part of the legalese — ironic considering that if he’d deleted his account before Feb. 4 his account really would have been gone for good.

In his blog posting, Zuckerberg explained that the language had to be tweaked to resolve a conflict over ownership of messages posted by one Facebook user onto another user’s page.

“When a person shares something like a message with a friend, two copies of that information are created — one in the person’s sent messages box and the other in their friend’s inbox,” he writes. “Even if the person deactivates their account, their friend still has a copy of that message.”

Zuckerberg then makes a subtle but persuasive legal argument.

“People also want to be able to bring the information others have shared with them — like email addresses, phone numbers, photos and so on — to other services and grant those services access to those people’s information,” he points out.

“These two positions are at odds with each other. There is no system today that enables me to share my email address with you and then simultaneously lets me control who [sic] you share it with and also lets you control what services you share it with.”

Posted in News | Comments closed

NY Times Article-Internet Marketing

In regards to the business associated within the Internet, I stumbled across a very intriguing and delightful article. It involves one of the most popular newspapers in NY ( The NY Post) and its attempt to try and build on thier capital. You guys could all read on further and let me know what you all think.

Just enter this url into your browser..

http://www.nypost.com/seven/02042009/business/times_may_revive_its_failed_pay_for_web__153422.htm

Posted in Add new tag, Uncategorized | Comments closed

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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(R) Another day

Another day or should I said another week just passed

I am pretty much driving by my calendar. and following the step there.

whenever vacation starts, I become less motivated.

How I wish life is just a schedule

so I do not have to worry anything after this.

Posted in Random | Comments closed

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments closed

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Harvard Business Review – Article

The below article relates well to our next class, particularly the eBay portion.  Take a look if you get a chance. 

How to Design Smart Business Experiments. Davenport, Thomas H.1Harvard Business Review; Feb2009, Vol. 87 Issue 2, p68-76, 9p, 1 diagram, 1 illustration, 2 color

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Hello world from Michael Dong!!!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

 

This is my first blog of year 2009. After my numerous attempts and trying and all that,I finally realized that what caused me so much pain was my laptop computer, “he”  was the one that not allowing me to sign up for this blog website. Thank God I got everything fixed now by using Baruch’s computer, and I think I do need an extra credit for all the hard work I had pulled out for past 20 minutes. Have a good day you all.

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

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(C)Internet Marketing

I am pretty exciting for this blog thing to work. Its amazing for me to even have a school related blog, although I had tried pretty much 30 webblogs or social network in the past. I wonder How will this one be different from the other.

For those who do not know me, or probably will not know me personally in the future.

My name is Tina Chen and nice to meet you.

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Hello world!

Hey everybody! It’s an early Sunday morning, and it seems like i’m the first person to register for the blogs@Baruch website. I don’t have a good memory, so I don’t remember all of the instructor’s instructions on setting up the account. Either way, just wanted to say hello to the whole class, and enjoy the rest of your weekend.

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments closed

Hello world!

Welcome to Blogs@Baruch. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment