Tag Archives: spam

Google Now Has Its Own URL Shortener

Google made a couple of announcements today that actually combined for perhaps a more interesting announcement than either of them as stand-alone news items. First, Google has added a new share button to the Google Toolbar , which allows users to share any site on the web via their social network of choice. Second, Google announced that with Feedburner, you can now set your feeds up to post to Twitter . The thing that these two announcements have in common is that they both utilize a new URL shortener from Google. They tried to slip that in their quietly a couple of times, but then went ahead and made an announcement about the service itself. The shortening service is located at goo.gl , but it is not available for broad consumer use at this point. Google is just using it itself to compliment the aforementioned services. In other words, you can’t just go to goo.gl and shorten a URL yourself. However, Google says that in time, it may offer such an option. “We think people who use the Google Toolbar and FeedBurner will benefit from a shortener that is easily accessible — making it faster and easier to share, post and email links,” Google says. They also say the core goals of the Google URL Shortener are: – Stability – ensuring that the service has very good uptime – Security – protecting users from malware and phishing pages – Speed – fast resolution of short URLs Google’s standard privacy policy applies to goo.gl. The company says that it may choose to publicly display aggregate and non-personally identifiable statistics about particular shortened links, such as the number of end use clicks. On a related note, Facebook also now has its own URL shortener. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged feeds, nbsp, new era, policy-applies, short urls, spam, twitter, url shortener | Leave a comment

A Black Hat Debate At SES Chicago

This is the time of year when morality becomes mainstream; just try going a day without hearing references to “naughty,” “nice,” a scrooge, or a grinch. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged Business, chicago, conversation, david naylor, good experience, oversight, really-matter, ses chicago, spam, time search | Leave a comment

Anonymous Comment Costs School Employee His Job

Most of us have blogs, right? How do you react to anonymous vulgar comments? Hit SPAM, right? Yeah, me too. And so did the Director of Social Media for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Kurt Greenbaum. The first time. But when the anonymous commenter again posted the single-word vulgarity, Greenbaum tracked his IP address—to a school. Probably thinking he was reporting a misbehaving student, Greenbaum contacted the school and explained the situation. Six hours later, the school called back: they’d found the commenter—an employee. After they confronted him, the employee resigned. Most of us probably have an intrinsic notion that the anonymous commenter and Greenbaum both acted inappropriately (although there was no way for Greenbaum to know he was turning in an employee and not a student)—but perhaps the more important question is whether they were acting legally. Greenbaum, a Post-Dispatch employee, should be bound by the paper’s online privacy policy, which states: We will not share individual user information with third parties unless the user has specifically approved the release of that information. However, at the beginning of the policy, they stipulate that “Your IP address does not contain personally identifiable information, nor does it identify you personally.” So is that individual user information? Sounds like it’s not. And the Post-Dispatch’s ToS is an exercise in CYA (they define “submission” to include comments): You automatically waive any claim that any use of such content violates any of your rights, including privacy rights, publicity rights, moral rights or any other right, including the right to approve the way we use such content. You are responsible for the content of all Submissions and acknowledge that third parties may hold you responsible for content related claims including libel, invasion of privacy, misappropriation of likeness and disclosure of confidential information. You shall indemnify, defend and hold us, our parent company and our affiliated entities (including our officers, directors, owners, agents and employees) harmless from all liability and costs incurred by those indemnified in connection with any claim arising out of any breach by you of the above representations and warranties and for any claims related to the content or your Submissions. And, naturally, the ToS stipulates that using the site to “upload, post, email, transmit or otherwise make available content that is harmful to minors in any way, or that is harassing, harmful, threatening, abusive, vulgar, obscene, defamatory, libelous, hateful, or racially, ethnically or otherwise objectionable” violates the ToS, too. And how were Anon’s actions illegal? Well, setting aside possible obscenity charges (while legally problematic, “obscenity” is not protected under the First Amendment), the school probably also has policies—policies that dictate the use of school resources. Most likely, this comment was made on school time, from a school computer, using the school’s Internet connection. Somehow, I can’t imagine there’s a provision in the policy that allows for use of school resources for posting vulgar comments online. By violating these policies, the employee could face discipline or even termination. What do you think? Would these policies hold up in court? Comments Continue reading

Posted in Business, Legal, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged employee, first-amendment, Legal, louis post dispatch, moral rights, privacy rights, school, spam, user information | Leave a comment

Twitter Continues Beta Testing of Retweet Feature

Update 3: Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged article, feature, means, retweet, retweeting, retweets, social-networks, spam, traffic, trending-topics, trends, twitter, twitter-status | Leave a comment

Spam Will Not Keep You Away from Email

With all of the spam out there and the increasing amount of malice that comes with it, it’s easy to look at the situation and think that email must be dying. Combine the overwhelming amounts of inbox spam and the ever-increasing popularity of communication tools like Twitter and Facebook, and you may ask yourself why you even need email. Well, I’ve got ten answers for you here . Don’t get me wrong. Email will evolve. In fact, it’s already begun to . But email as a utility is currently in no danger of going away. This is a view that Pro Blogger Darren Rowse appears to have in common with me, as he implied in a recent interview with WebProNews . Rowse notes that email is simply a familiar way to get information , and it’s still one of the most popular ways. He offers his blog content via email as a weekly newsletter, and it gets twice as many subscribers as his RSS feeds do. Furthermore, the people getting those email newsletters are even clicking on the ads. As Rowse says, people rely on email. That’s not just the old folk either. A recent study found that people between 18 and 24 years of age would rather give up social networks than email. In fact, according to that study, they’d be more likely to give up television . For all of the unwanted marketing messages and spam out there flooding inboxes, email is still the preferred channel of communication by consumers for receiving marketing messages, according to a different survey . Spam is going to flood every channel that achieves the usage of the masses. It’s been going on longer than we’ve had a name for it. As long as I’ve been alive, I’ve been forced to sit through commercials I had no interest in seeing, while trying to watch television. Granted, they couldn’t give my television a virus, but they have always been intrusive to some extent. Now that social networks are rising to popularity, the spam is sure following there. It’s unavoidable. People will spam you no matter what you’re using. But you’ll still use it. Related Articles: Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged 24 years, commercials, communication tools, facebook, going-on-longer, overwhelming amounts, people, preferred channel, review and story, rowse, social-networks, spam, twitter, weekly newsletter | Leave a comment