Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: Biz Stone, Facebook, Google, Major League Baseball, Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft, MSN, Sony Music Entertainment
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Companies using Twitter
for commercial purposes may soon start getting charged for that activity, according to an interview British trade magazine Marketing
(part of BrandRepublic) held with co-founder Biz Stone. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/10/twitter-to-start-charging-companies-for-having-an-account 2/10)
The founders of ConnectU were apparently paid as much as $65 million in cash and Facebook stock to settle their longstanding dispute with Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook, according to an ad unearthed by The Recorder
this morning. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/10/law-firm-blunder-reveals-value-of-facebookconnectu-settlement-65-million 2/10)
Time to induldge your inner animator. Home animation site GoAnimate is officially announcing tomorrow that they have obtained the rights from CBS to allow you to create your own Star Trek animated stories. (http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/02/09/first-look-at-star-trek-animation-studio 2/9)
Google has announced
its plan to help consumers gain better information about their personal electricity usage. The plan, which is listed on Google’s philanthropic website
, promotes the adoption of smart electricity meters in homes across the world. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/02/10/googles-powermeter-project-for-when-the-webs-data-is-not-enough 2/10)
ESPN and Major League Baseball have formed a marketing partnership involving two of their premium online assets: MLB.TV Premium, which streams regular-season games, and ESPN Insider, which has exclusive sports-related content. Starting next week, the companies will begin offering a subscription package that combines the two services, and the arrangement is being promoted via an online and print ad campaign. Mediaweek (2/9)
Fox Sports renewed and expanded its online partnership with MSN to include a broader array of brands and ad components. FoxSports.com will adopt Microsoft products such as Windows Live and Live Search, continue to be the exclusive sports channel for MSN including content from Fox Sports Interactive’s Scout Media and WhatifSports.com for the first time, and take a “more integrated approach” to the development of new products for both online and mobile. (Cynopsis 2/10)
Sony Music Entertainment created an online app to allow users to send an ecard featuring a personalized sing-along with Mariah Carey. (Sony actually launched the concept with a Christmas card app to promote the release of the Elvis Duets CD.) (Cynopsis 2/10)
Comcast’s broadband video services company thePlatform announced a series of new initiatives aimed at lowering streaming costs for small and mid-sized publishers. To save on content delivery costs – typically the biggest cost associated with offering video – thePlatform is partnering with EdgeCast to resell CDN services at a volume-discounted rate typically reserved for larger providers. The company also announced a new “Advantage” program offering discounts for companies who use partners’ services including ad insertion platform Panache, ad management firm BlackArrow, video metrics specialist TubeMogul, video ad network ScanScout and analytics firm Visible Measures. thePlatform managed video for clients who collectively drove 440 million views in Dec. according to comScore, ranking it 3rd behind Google sites and Fox Interactive Media. (Cynopsis 2/10)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: Amit Kapur, Apple, Chris DeWolfe, Evan Williams, Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, Myspace, Web 2.0
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
MySpace, the popular online social network owned by News Corp., could develop a digital music player in the future, pitting it against Apple’s hot-selling iPod. However, “right now, we’re just focusing on the service,” said CEO Chris DeWolfe, speaking at the Web 2.0 summit. (Iwantmedia 11/7, http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSTRE4A612L20081107 11/7)
MySpace COO Amit Kapur revealed at the Web 2.0 Summit that MySpace is working on its own payments and virtual gift products that MySpace developers will be able to add to their own apps. (
http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/11/07/making-money-on-myspace-payments-and-virtual-gifts-coming-soon 11/7)
Facebook doesn’t need more money, according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who spoke Thursday afternoon at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco. The independent online social network has already attracted thousands of online advertisers, he said. Revenue is in the “hundreds of millions.” (Iwantmedia 11/7, http://blogs.barrons.com/techtraderdaily/2008/11/06/facebooks-zuckerberg-we-dont-need-more-money 11/6)
In a panel at the Web 2.0 Summit, Twitter co-founder and CEO Evan Williams wouldn’t concretely answer a big unanswered question: how the hit microblogging site plans to make money. He did hint, however, of a possible business model: corporate accounts for businesses. (Iwantmedia 11/7, http://news.cnet.com/8301-13577_3-10084007-36.html 11/6)
Online classified service Craigslist reached an agreement with 40 state attorneys general to curb its “erotic services” listings, long used for local prostitution services. Clients using the category must now pay a fee using a valid credit card as well as provide Craigslist with a working phone number. (Cynopsis 11/7)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: Calif, Facebook, Google, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft, News and Media, Yahoo
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Microsoft is said to be in talks again with Yahoo, but “no big deal” is in the works — contradicting a report on the tech blog TechCrunch that said the software giant is discussing a full buyout of the No. 2 Web search engine. The blog report sent Yahoo’s shares up 11%. (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://techland.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2008/06/24/yahoomsft-talks-on-but-no-big-deal-in-works 6/24)
Twitter, the free microblogging service, is closing on another round of financing, this time led by Spark Capital, along with Jeff Bezos‘s investment entity, Bezos Expeditions. Twitter vows that one day it “will become a sustainable business supported by a revenue model.” (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://news.cnet.com/8301-10787_3-9976578-60.html 6/24)
A long-running legal battle over whether Mark Zuckerberg ripped off Harvard classmates in launching Facebook is moving to a courtroom in San Jose, Calif., for a fight that could end up “catastrophic” for the social-networking site, observers say. “This could be a fight for Facebook’s life.” (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://www.mercurynews.com/businessheadlines/ci_9682260?nclick_check=1 6/24)
AT&T aims to expand its services to help companies deliver digital media to consumers’ computers and mobile phones, moving into competition with outfits like Akamai. AT&T, which already has customers like Forbes.com, will spend $70 million to bolster its network infrastructure. (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSN2434215220080624 6/24)
New content recognition software may spark more copyright-related battles online like the recent Associated Press-blogger flap. Publishers will know which sites attract the most traffic using their articles, and may demand a cut on the associated advertising revenue. (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/jun2008/tc20080625_325222.htm 6/25)
CBS Television Stations’ digital media group is rolling out a widget-advertising-revenue-sharing program with local bloggers at more than a dozen network-owned stations across the country. The program launched at New York’s WCBS last week and was “making money from day one.” (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://www.observer.com/2008/cbs-news-becomes-widget-factory 6/24)
Internet advertising spending will surpass radio this year, forecasts Steve King, head of Publicis Groupe’s ZenithOptimedia. “Internet has already overtaken cinema and outdoors. In a couple of years it’s going to overtake magazines.” Also, Publicis is forming a unit to boost Internet sales. (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601204&sid=aeJ2MQBDVzKA 6/25)
Charter Communications, the fourth-largest U.S. cable operator, is backing off a plan to monitor customers’ Internet surfing data. The company was planning to harvest the data for clues to customer interests and then make money from advertisers who would use it to target pitches. (Iwantmedia 6/25, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/24/AR2008062401033.html 6/25)
Filed under: ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: AOL, Google, Jeff Bewkes, Jerry Yang, Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft, Walter Mossberg, Yahoo
ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA
Walt Mossberg just finished interviewing Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang and President Sue Decker (my real time notes are here, see Peter Kafka’s notes as well).The two key topics of the interview were the failed Microsoft merger, and Yahoo’s core focus as a company. And while Yang never actually said the words quoted in the title above, his tone and body language screamed “We’re Done.” (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/28/jerry-yang-were-done 5/29)
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang
Facebook boy Mark Zuckerberg has no plans to sell the social-networking site, even if Microsoft offered $15 billion. “The goal of the company is to execute on the things we talked about before,” he says, “such as helping users share information more easily.” (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aRQ4j.Mq8Hcc 5/29)
Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook
Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes says the media giant doesn’t want to “unload” its AOL online division — but he is open to a deal if it increases the value of the Internet property. “If someone gave [AOL] more scale, and more resources, of course we’d be open to that.” (http://www.smartmoney.com/breaking-news/ON/index.cfm?story=ON-20080528-000910-1914 5/28)
Jeff Bewkes, CEO of Time Warner
News Corp. chief Rupert Murdoch predicts the U.S. economy will be dismal in the coming months. “People are suffering terribly,” he says. Newspapers are going to “deteriorate tremendously.” Also, Google is “the greatest company in America.” Barack Obama is “like a rock star.” (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aTVbDsf.hq6g 5/29)
News Corp. Chief Rupert Murdoch
The American Federation of Television and Radio Artists is reaching a tentative deal with Hollywood studios on a three-year contract. The deal establishes fees for content downloaded online and preserves actors’ rights on the use of their voices and images in online clips. (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-aftra29-2008may29,0,5396803.story 5/29)
At the Google I/O conference today, VP Engineering Vic Gundotra stressed the supremacy of the browser among all internet-enabled platforms.So it should come as no surprise that the Google Earth team has announced on the same day that it has ported the Google Earth desktop client’s 3D mapping technology into the browser. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/28/google-earths-3d-goodness-comes-to-the-browser 5/29)
Amazon.com will seek to beef up its digital-media menu with the introduction in the next few weeks of a new streaming-video service, CEO Jeff Bezos said at a conference Wednesday. He declined to elaborate, but the company has launched such digital products and services as its Kindle book reader, a music store and a site to download movies, TV shows and videos. MSNBC/Reuters (5/29)
TiVo will offer its subscribers Disney films for download to broadband connected TiVo DVRs directly from subscribers’ TV sets. Subscribers will be able to rent the movies for a 24-hour period through a deal with Disney-ABC and digital entertainment provider CinemaNow. (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080528/tivo_disney.html 5/29)
Google is supplying software technology that will let users of News Corp.’s MySpace more quickly search their e-mail. MySpace counted 110 million users earlier this year. More than 170 million messages are sent daily by members of the leading social-networking site. (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSN2839657420080528 5/29)
Reed Hastings, the CEO of mail-order movie firm Netflix, says the company’s business model has only about five years of steam left in it. While others at the company sought to soften Hastings’ remarks after the fact, the CEO told attendees at an investor conference that streaming movies over the Internet could boost Netflix’s worldwide subscriber total to 20 million. CNET (5/28)
Blockbuster has unveiled a prototype kiosk that, some day, will allow users to have an ATM-like experience with digital movie downloads. The company, which is looking to move beyond its rental-chain roots, said it also was mulling systems that would allow customers to download films via set-top boxes and/or Internet Protocol TVs. TBO.com (Tampa, Fla.)/Associated Press (5/29)
Women’s ad network Glam Media thinks it’s worth more than $1.3 billion, reports Matt Marshall at VentureBeat. That’s how much an unnamed suitor is supposedly offering for Glam. But Marshall thinks that Glam will turn it down. The company has raised $115 million, most recently in an $85 million round. Glam runs ads on female-oriented Websites that it says reaches 64 million people a month. Today it just launched a video ad service called the Glam TV Platform that bundles rights-cleared video (from partners like E! Online, CelebTV, Sony BMG, Brightcove, YouTube, and others) with video ads that publishers can put on their sites. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/29/how-beautiful-is-glam 5/29)
(Below) Way harsh Ty. It seems Diller is trying to force relevant businesses into irrelevancy for his own purposes and this makes him out of touch with the new media universe. To call Google irrelevant is like calling a telephone useless
IAC/Interactive CEO Barry Diller on Google: “They are irrelevant to us. I think our [Ask.com] product is in most respects better.” On Facebook: The social network is “nothing more than the Princess phone 20 years ago” — a symbol of teenage communication coolness. (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://blogs.barrons.com/techtraderdaily/2008/05/28/d-iacinteractives-barry-diller-on-the-spinoff-plan-do-hollywood-kids-have-any-teeth 5/2)
Tom Cruise is launching a Web site: TomCruise.com. Few stars have seen themselves pilloried more on the Web than Cruise, who has watched numerous embarrassing moments ricochet around the Internet at warp speed. His new site appears to seek to “protect his brand.” (Iwantmedia 5/29, http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080529/ap_en_mo/on_the_net 5/29)
Web measurement firm comScore is going mobile. The company is buying M:Metrics for $44.3 million plus 50,000 options of comScore stock. M:Metrics measures mobile Web usage, and will give comScore the ability to track mobile visitors, pageviews, and ads clicked. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/28/comscore-buys-mmetrics-for-44-million-to-measure-the-mobile-web 5/29)
Companies that track users online behavior could see their Internet advertising growth slow because of consumer uneasiness with such practices, predicts the Stanford Group. Many Internet users would choose to opt out of online tracking if they were able, says the research firm. (http://www.webpronews.com/topnews/2008/05/28/privacy-issues-could-slow-online-advertising-growth 5/29)
Distributing friend connections across the web has been quite a hot topic in the Web 2.0 community as of late. MySpace, Facebook, and Google have all come out with their own initiatives for sharing social graph data with any number of websites. And there appears to be a struggle over just who will ultimately control the aggregated data – if anyone. So it may or may not come as a surprise that Gigya, a startup known for distributing widgets across social networks, blogs and other social media platforms, is getting into the mix by launching a service into public beta called Gigya Socialize. (http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/05/28/gigya-socialize-goes-up-against-google-friend-connect 5/29)
Microsoft officials said Wednesday that the company’s Windows Vista Media Center does protect against copyright infringement on its pay-per-view and video-on-demand offerings, but does nothing to block over-the-air or QAM digital broadcasts. The company came under fire May 12, when Vista Media Center users were stopped while trying to record two NBC Universal shows, “American Gladiators” and “Medium.” CNET (5/28)
Filed under: Feature, ONLINE SERVICES/INTERACTIVE MEDIA | Tags: BusinessWeek, Facebook, Keynote, Mark Zuckerberg, Sarah Lacy, SXSW
SXSW: THE FACEBOOK KEYNOTE TRAIN WRECK
As I was watching this SXSW keynote yesterday, a colleague texted me, “I’ll give you a nickel if you scream out either get a room or this is getting awkward.” I think that effectively sums up the overall theme of the keynote.
In this keynote, Mark Zuckerberg was interviewed by BusinessWeek columnist Sarah Lacy. I was shocked by Lacy’s immaturity and general inability to do something as simple as ask a question. Even seventh graders understand that they must limit their usage of the word “like” in presentations. In this short clip above, you’ll catch the best moment of the keynote: Mark Zuckerberg implores Lacy to ask him a question and the audience, including myself, reacts with all-out applause. If that moment couldn’t get any more awkward, Lacy then continues her on-stage suicide by claiming that she “apparently can’t do anything right.” Yup, not in this case. I’m afraid not.
A friend ran into her later that night at the Google Blogger party and asked about her reaction to the audience’s assault on her interview methods. In essence, she claimed that she was a talent to be reckoned with and that all critics can just go to hell. When telling this to my friend, a journalist, in a room full of bloggers, she asserted to him that this was “off the record” without waiting for his approval. Girl, you crazy.
Sarah Lacy ladies and gentlemen.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s keynote address at the SXSWi festival “out-and-out bombed.” (http://www.news.com/8301-13577_3-9889519-36.html 3/9)





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