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Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts

Friday, 30 March 2012

Mark Zuckerberg Gets Star Treatment From Japan’s Prime Minister

Mark Zuckerberg is huge in Asia.

The Facebook founder was besieged by flash bulbs and greeted by a somewhat “star-struck” Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiko Noda during a visit to Tokyo Thursday, Reuters reports.

“It’s a funny feeling to see you here because I watched the film,” Noda told Zuckerberg, according the Reuters.
“Very different,” Zuckerberg replied about The Social Network, which took a famously critical look at Facebook’s origins when its founder was an undergraduate at Harvard University.

Zuckerberg visited Noda’s house along with a group of Japanese cabinet ministers. Reuters reports that he “strode through the entrance like a movie star” and was “dressed smartly for the occasion in a grey suit and blue tie.”

The meeting seems to have played out almost like a summit between two heads of state. Noda thanked Zuckerberg for the role social media has played in helping people organize and recover from last year’s deadly earthquake and tsunami, while Zuckerberg stressed his company’s dedication to success in Japan. With more than 845 million members, Facebook’s user base is more than six times as large as the population of Japan. If Facebook doubled as a nation, it would be the world’s third-most populated, trailing only China and India.

Facebook has more than 10 million users in Japan, and Japan is the only country outside the United States where the company has an engineering office.

Facebook has doubled its user base in Japan since last year’s earthquake and tsunami, and in February it launched a Disaster Message Board there to facilitate communication during emergencies. Japanese Facebook users can also include their blood type in profile information.

In May, Zuckerberg’s company will offer a $5 billion IPO, the largest in history for an Internet company.
Would you be star-struck to meet Mark Zuckerberg? Let us know in the comments.

Source: Mashable

Facebook Adds Yahoo Patent Lawsuit to IPO Filing

Facebook updated its $5 billion initial public offering (IPO) filing this week to include the details about its patent battle with Yahoo.

This is the third time Facebook has amended its S-1 form. The list of lawsuits against the company seems to grow as the company gets closer to becoming a publicly traded company, which is expected to happen by May.

The company is required to keep the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission — and its potential shareholders — in the loop about legal issues that could drain the company’s wallet. Although Facebook seeks to raise $5 billion for its IPO, market analysts have valued Facebook at $100 billion.

On March 12, Yahoo filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in San Jose, Calif., stating Facebook infringed on 10 of Yahoo’s patent technologies related to “advertising,” “social networking,” “privacy,” “customization” and “messaging.”

“Yahoo is seeking unspecified damages, a damage multiplier for alleged willful infringement, and an injunction,” the SEC S-1 form says.

Facebook has not filed a counterclaim or commented on Yahoo’s allegations. The company said it plans to “vigorously defend this lawsuit.”

“This litigation is still in its early stages and the final outcome, including our liability, if any, with respect to these claims, is uncertain,” Facebook wrote in the most recently updated IPO. “If an unfavorable outcome were to occur in this litigation, the impact could be material to our business, financial condition, or results of operations.”

Along with intellectual property claims lawsuits, the social network is juggling class action lawsuits, too. Facebook notes that defending intellectual property lawsuits is expensive — and that it’s unsure if its defense will be successful.

“As we face increasing competition and gain an increasingly high profile, including in connection with our initial public offering, we expect the number of patent and other intellectual property claims against us to grow,” Facebook said in the S-1 form.

Source: Mashable

Are You YouTube’s Next Celebrity Vlogger?

Are you itching to be the next, popular video blogger like iJustine? Then you might want to consider entering YouTube’s Next Vlogger competition.

YouTube is looking for vloggers who have a fledgling fan base but are dedicated to their channel—the kind of people who just need that extra push to reach the next level of YouTube celebrity. The Google-owned site will pick 16 winners and pair them with mentors to help them improve their channel. It sort of sounds like MTV’s Twitter jockey contest but you’ll actually need some talent to win this.

Applications can be submitted through April 18 and winners will receive $5,000 worth of new video equipment and $10,000 worth of promotion on YouTube. They’ll also have “intimate” mentoring sessions for three months on Google+ Hangout with top vloggers.

The project, announced on Wednesday, is still in going through some growing pains. The special Next Vlogger website fails to load and bumps to a 404 error page.

With the all the lousy video diaries on YouTube, maybe this competition will improve some channels, like F7Mx. The alleged number one fan of Taylor Swift can’t hold his camera still. iJustine could probably help with that, and just might also tell him to stop doing that creepy kiss at the beginning of all his videos. See, we’re all winners in this contest.

The competition is part of a broader initiative, called YouTube Next Creator program, intended to boost original content on the video-sharing website. YouTube held similar contests in 2011 looking for the next top chefs and trainers. Following the success of those contests, YouTube asked users what the next creator program. Users responded with vlogging.

However, no word if YouTube will hold the next, great Reply Girl competition but that doesn’t seem likely. 

Photo courtesy of iStockphoto, Picture Lake

Source: Mashable

6 Ways to Acquire New Customers via Social Media

We all know social media is an important tool for brand awareness and customer acquisition — but how exactly are you supposed to convert random Twitter and Facebook users into real-life customers? Well, that depends.

Different brands have different challenges when it comes to customer acquisition: “If you’re our customer, you’ve signed up for a year-long service, unlike the Starbucks of the world, where you can be a customer by coming in for a cup of coffee one day,” says Lisa D’Aromando, social media community manager at Equinox. Whether you’re a clothing shop, a restaurant or a subscription service, you must tailor your strategy so that it makes sense for your brand. That said, there are a few universal ways to help your company attract new faces on the social web.

“I’m a big believer in creating and sharing meaningful content,” says Danni Snyder, co-founder and creative director at jewelry brand Dannijo. “Over time, that is every brand’s best bet for creating and sustaining a following that will grow their business.”

But what does it all entail? Mashable spoke with some super-social brands about how they find new customers and lock in their existing ones they have as repeat buyers.

1. Get Your Search On


There are 340 million tweets sent per day — odds are that a few of them are referencing your brand, though you may not realize it. “Just because chatter on social media channels isn’t mentioning your brand by handle or hashtag doesn’t mean it isn’t happening,” says McKee Floyd, director of brand development at Sweetgreen.

The key is to be proactive. For the company’s upcoming Sweetlife Festival, Floyd set up Twitter searches for “sweetlife” and “sweetlife festival” on TweetDeck, which pulls the tweets even if users didn’t include the hashtag. “As groups of friends have conversations back and forth on Twitter about whether or not they should buy tickets, we monitor and chime in with helpful info, answering logistical questions about the festival and hopefully swaying them towards choosing to attend.”

Geoff Alexander, managing partner at Chicago’s Wow Bao, says his team also uses TweetDeck to search for certain keywords — such as “wow bao,” “baomouth” and “hot Asian buns” — and they reply to any and all posts they find. Wow Bao initially got into social media because there wasn’t a budget for advertising, so the brand opted to spread the word by giving away buns. “@BaoMouth searches the Internet for ways to reward people — giving away bao, full meals or mobile money [for the food truck],” says Alexander.

But the search tactic works for more than just food concepts. Danni Snyder says she monitor mentions of Dannijo religiously and also searches Twitter for “jewelry.” Consuming social media buzz about jewelry — and not just Dannijo’s wares — helps the brand be “aware of what people are talking about, what they like and don’t like, etc.” says Snyder, which can help Dannijo cultivate a new audience with their next collection.
One tip for finding new customers is to see who’s engaging with your competitors — if someone just started following or tweeted at or checked in at another bakery in the neighborhood, you could tweet at the person to come check out your cupcakes. They customer will appreciate the shout-out and the fact that you handpicked them to be your customer. Get clever with searches that are relevant to your business and offerings to help you target potential customers — then reel them in by being charming and human, not salesy.

2. Use Images to Engage



Who would have thought Mr Dannijo would be back in such a good way?! #EVERYBODY #eyespy #MRDANNIJO @manrepeller @danielleasnyder @jodielynns #putaneyeonit
A picture is worth a thousand words — photos drive twice as much engagement as text posts do on Facebook. So if you’re looking to attract some new fans, start snapping pics.

Snyder says Instagram is her favorite medium for connecting with fans. “You can subliminally market without annoying your customers because each post is capable of accomplishing a number of things,” she says. “In one post, we can showcase a new design available at Dannijo.com, thus driving traffic to our ecommerce site; show how we’d style the jewelry; mention a tastemaker friend like Questlove or ManRepeller and promote them while they’re wearing Dannijo; inspire discussion and engagement, gaining valuable customer feedback; and provide followers some visual inspiration and insight into your creative process.”

But the pics need not be product-focused. Dannijo posts photos of food and musicians that embody the Dannijo vibe. Similarly, Rent the Runway posts pictures of various style trends. “On Facebook, we try to use as much imagery as possible — not just promotional imagery of our dresses, but images that relate to pop-culture,” says Jenny Fleiss, president and co-founder of Rent the Runway. For example, in anticipation of the upcoming Great Gatsby movie, the RTR blog posted about Gatsby-inspired fashion trends.

3. Host a Competition


Nothing gets customers going like some swag, so contests are a great way to boost your followers and engagement. But be strategic about what you’re offering, or else you could attract the wrong followers.
ModCloth hosts monthly photo contests that garner hundreds of entries and thousands of votes. “Our most recent contest, Thrifted Treasures, asked our fans to share their favorite vintage finds, and our community could vote up their favorites,” explains Natasha Khan, ModCloth’s social media manager. “The social actions surrounding that event brought in thousands of new fans, which we otherwise would not have gained.”

Khan says contests and offers have been the most high impact customer generation events for ModCloth. But if you’re planning on hosting a contest, Khan has a few suggestions. First, build in actions that allow the fan to share to their social networks, as this will increase virality. Second, stay true to your brand. Third, tweak the contest to fit the platform on which you’re running it — “On Facebook that means sharing photography, on Twitter it means wordplay hashtags, and for Polyvore it means styling outfits,” says Khan.
“Quality is more important than quantity when it comes to Facebook fan growth. If your company product is clothing and your prize is free iPads, then you will gain followers that might not belong to your core demographic. Make sure the reward is something your customer will value, such as a gift card or grab bag of your products,” says Khan.

4. Spice Up The Platforms


With so many platforms to manage, be sure to have a distinct M.O. on each channel — and cross-pollinate sparingly. If a customer sees the same information and pictures on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram and Pinterest, she need only follow you on one of these platforms. Also, be wary of overpromotion. Nothing is more of a turnoff than a constant sales messaging — people easily can unfollow, and they will.

Interestingly, many of Wow Bao’s posts have nothing to do with bao — @BaoMouth tweets during award shows and keeps a lively conversation going on a number of topics, winning people over with its spunky personality.

Of course, a big reason why you use various social media channels is to promote your product, so there are some things to keep in mind for the messaging when you are pushing your goods.

“Prove the value of being a Facebook fan. If you can find the same content and offers on other channels, there is no incentive to also follow the brand on Facebook,” Khan says. “Exclusive Facebook-only offers and original content reinforces our investment in the channel.” The same goes for every other social platform.
For Equinox, Facebook is for broadcasting of events and initiatives, like Cycle For Survival, Twitter is more conversation and geared toward responding to questions about membership, fitness routines and healthy eating, and Foursquare is the platform on which to find offers for Equinox’s spa and shop, which are open to the public. “Every Monday in March, we posted a different Foursquare check-in special for The Shop at all of our locations,” says D’Aromando. “Since you don’t have to necessarily be a member to go to The Shop or The Spa, these specials are accessible to everyone,” and can lure in potential customers into becoming Equinox members.

The company’s Q blog is another digital project where you’ll find awe-inspiring videos and original lifestyle content — a great way to add value for potential customers. “Q was launched to extend our brand and increase this word-of-mouth among our target audience. It gives people — members and nonmembers — topics and material from our Equinox experts to share with others,” says D’Aromando. “In lieu of promos, we create a different sort of currency: highly produced, branded content on Q with exclusives for our social media communities.”

5. Make It Personal


No one like a mass message — consumers like to feel as if they’re the only ones being spoken to. You should know your customers and speak to them in personal ways to establish touchpoints that build relationships and create loyalty.

“I like to make it very personable — if someone tweets a question I make sure to answer immediately,” says Steven Rojas, social media director at GrandLife Hotels. “Often I go as far as Googling that person to make sure I know as much as I can about them before reaching out. I want to humanize the brand so people don’t feel like they are speaking to a computer but to an actual person who cares about what they are saying. My obsession for all things digital never sleeps, so I make sure everyone gets what they need, when they need it.”

Live chats are another effective way to offer intimate interaction and engagement with fans. “It’s about having a conversation with your community, so we often do live chats with our stylists on Facebook to answer any styling questions customers may have,” says Fleiss. “These posts tend to elicit the most ‘Likes’ and comments.”

While you’re browsing sites for comments to respond to, don’t ignore negative feedback — addressing the complaint is an opportunity to convert an unhappy customer into an impressed brand ambassador.

“We’re very appreciative when someone takes the time to let us know about a bad experience or an issue because then we can help fix it,” says Jenny Danzi, a Mountain Dew brand manager. “Reply to every complaint to turn those consumers into advocates — even if you can not offer an instant fix, people appreciate getting a human response,” she adds. And don’t forget that even the littlest gesture can make a big difference. “Sometimes for us it can be as simple as letting consumers know where they can find our products,” says Danzi.

Wow Bao takes it to the next level, proactively finding ways to create touchpoints with consumers. “We comment on any and all posts mentioning people’s birthdays and pop culture,” says Alexander. “We even schedule posts for people’s birthdays, when people post something like, ‘My birthday is in 12 days’” — a very personalized tactic that can go a long way.

6. Let Your Customers Shine


Nothing makes a customer feel better than being acknowledged — or better yet, honored — by their favorite brand. Is there a way to offer kudos to your loyal fans? If so, make it happen.

Because women love to talk about what they’re wearing — and often wear RTR to social events such as weddings and cocktail parties — Rent the Runway strives to move these conversations online. “We have weekly style award contests on our blog and Facebook Page, and a section of our site called RTR Moments where women can share photos of themselves in RTR dresses,” says Fleiss.

For Mountain Dew, whose fan base is extremely young and active on social media, the “Diet Mountain Dew Supernova Spotter” is a great way to celebrate the return of the fan-chosen flavor in addition to highlighting the passion of the fans. “Dew drinkers can upload their photo of Diet Supernova, and on Friday we’ll open the entries up to public voting. Fifteen winners will each get a Diet Dew hoodie, and everyone who enters can easily share their Diet Supernova passion with friends,” Danzi says.

For Equinox, whose social media fan base is largely comprised of members, the goal isn’t as much to incentivize people to join (they already have), but to make them feel special for being members. “We have a Facebook app where members can refer friends directly, and if the friend joins, the member gets a referral bonus,” says D’Aromando. “We also just launched a program on Twitter where we’re rewarding our advocates by offering them private group fitness classes for them and their friends. This gives us a way to say ‘thanks’ to those who always post about us, and it gives them something to talk about with their friends — online and off.”

Brands, how does your company acquire new customers on social media? Consumers, what makes you want to become a customer? Let us know in the comments.

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Image courtesy of iStockphoto, akinbostanci



Source: Mashable

Will Sound Ever Be More Popular Than Web Video?

Soundcloud
There’s no denying that the Internet is already a very social place, but it’s positioning itself to speak up even more in the next few years.

According Alexander Ljung, the co-founder of Berlin-based Soundcloud — a social platform that allows users to create and share their originally created sounds online — the Internet is readying itself to become a much more audible medium.

“In time, sound could become even bigger than video on the Internet,” Ljung told Mashable. “It’s bizarre that the web is virtually silent, and we want to unmute it.”

Ljung — who will be speaking at our 2012 Mashable Connect conference in Orlando, Fla. — isn’t talking about having websites play sounds and songs when pages are navigated, but rather bringing the experience to life in a whole new way.

“Instead of just getting an emailed picture of a baby’s ultrasound, we will be able to hear its heartbeat at the same time,” Ljung said.

The same concept could apply to social networks like Facebook or web news consumption.
“Sound is one of the only mediums that can be consumed completely while multitasking, so it has the potential to do so much more on the web than it’s already doing,” Ljung said.

The interest in sound on web is on the rise. For example, SoundCloud has experienced significant growth since it launched in 2008. As of January 2012, the site boasted more than 10 million registered users, and averages 1 million new users per month.

Not only can users share their own audio clips and sounds, they can also collaborate with anyone on the site. For example, rapper Snoop Dogg is an active user of the platform and often encourages Soundcloud members to add vocals to the tracks he posts.

“Snoop Dogg asks millions of people to collaborate with him, and people are taking him up on it,” Ljung said. “We are starting to see celebrities interact with their fans in ways we’ve never seen before and we will see more of this in the future too.”

This May we’ll be exploring the future of sound and digital media at our signature conference, Mashable Connect.

Source: Mashable

Employee Social Password Privacy Measure Fails in the House

An amendment that would have prevented employers from demanding your social media passwords was defeated by House Republicans on Wednesday.

The measure, which was attached to a larger FCC bill, was introduced by Rep. Ed Perlmutter (D-Colo.) and defeated on a vote of 236-185.

“What this amendment does is it says that you cannot demand, as a condition of employment, that somebody reveal a confidential password to their Facebook, to their Flickr, to their Twitter, whatever their account may be,” Perlmutter said during a floor debate before the vote.

The password amendment met resistance from House Republicans, who didn’t consider the amendment necessary despite Perlmutter’s insistence that the amendment “would not change the overall impact or intent of the FCC Reform Act.”

Some Republicans, however, were open to addressing the problem in a separate bill.
The issue of employers demanding Facebook and Twitter passwords from prospective or current employees began making headlines after a recent report called attention to the phenomenon.

Since those initial reports, the response has been strong and swift. U.S. senator Richard Blumenthal (D.-Conn.) is planning on to introduce a bill to prevent the practice. Blumenthal, along with Sen. Schumer (D-N.Y.), is also calling for the Department of Justice to investigate the issue. Facebook also came out against the practice in a statement.

However, one of the lead writers of the original Associated Press story told the Hartford Courant that the practice “doesn’t seem to be widespread.”

Do you think there should be a law to prevent employers from accessing your social media passwords? Sound off in the comments below.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, PashaIgnatov

Source: Mashable

Kindle Fire 6.3 Update Makes Ebooks More Social

Amazon Kindle Fire - 600
Amazon has issued its latest software update for the Kindle Fire with a change that makes reading ebooks a lot more social.

The 6.3 Kindle Fire software version, released Thursday, lets device owners share favorite passages and notes from their ebooks on Facebook and Twitter. Passages and notes can already be highlighted and seen by other Kindle Fire readers viewing the same book, but Amazon wanted to bring the sharing and conversation online.

Among the new updates is a feature called Book Extras. This allows users to see supplemental material — from character descriptions and a glossary of common terms and locations used in the book to author information — without leaving the book. This feature can be accessed by tapping the top of the screen to bring up the toolbar and menu button, where Book Extras is located.

In addition, users who write, take notes, highlight passages and create personal documents within the device can store them in the Amazon Cloud and access them at any time via the Kindle Fire.

Amazon also announced an upgrade for its Kindle Fire browser, Silk. The browser can now load certain text on a website and isolate it from the rest of the crowded page.

“Silk will load the body of the page in a reading-optimized, single screen view (even for multi-page articles),” Amazon said in a press release. “The full page is still available in the background, allowing the reader to easily toggle back to a traditional view to see other interesting features on the page.”

An additional perk of the new software upgrade include longer movie rentals, which allows rented films to not expire for a period of time after the user starts to watch it, opposed to when they start to download.

“Print replica textbooks” are also now available for purchase and are exact copies of printed textbooks in ebook form. Amazon notes that users can save up to 60% off the list price of textbooks by going digital.

To update your Kindle Fire, users should connect to a Wi-Fi network and tap the Quick Settings icon in the upper right corner of the device to “Sync.” Updates should be performed when the device is fully charged.

Source: Mashable

Behind the Scenes of the World’s First Live-Tweeted Open-Heart Surgery

Doctors at Houston’s Memorial Hermann Northwest Hospital made medical and social media history last month by live-tweeting an open heart surgery for the first time ever.

Dr. Michael Macris performed a double-coronary artery bypass on a 57-year-old patient. Meanwhile, colleague Dr. Paresh Patel provided 140-character updates throughout the procedure, and answered questions submitted by followers of the hospital’s @houstonhospital Twitter account. Dr. Macris also wore a video camera attached to his head. Dr. Patel snapped additional photos, and posted some of the pictures and videos to Twitter. The procedure lasted two and a half hours, and the patient made it through fine.

More than anything, though, the feat is a powerful example of social media’s ability to connect people and shed light on even the most unexpected activities. Its success is a lesson in using creativity and digital innovation to educate mass audiences.

“We’re always becoming more connected as a society,” says Gary Kerr, CEO of the non-profit Memorial Hermann Healthcare System’s Northwest Hospital. “Information can’t be contained anymore, and that’s the most positive thing about the Internet.”

Hospital staff expected a modest amount of attention, but were surprised to see the event blow up online. Natalie Camarata, Memorial Hermann Healthcare System’s digital marketing manager, told Mashable the event delivered an estimated 125 million impressions through Twitter, Storify and media coverage in the weeks following the operation.

Since the surgery, Mashable interviewed several of the people involved in the groundbreaking idea, asking them what it means that social media can be leveraged in new, effective ways. We spoke with Dr. Macris, Dr. Patel, Kerr, Camarata and Beth Sartori, a Memorial Hermann marketing and communications executive. What follows is their inside story.

Pulling Back a Curtain


Memorial Hermann has embraced digital technology for the past several years. It has also hosted more than 50 webinars over the past year, and this week hosted a live social media-broadcasted Q&A about colonoscopies for Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month. The live-tweeted open-heart surgery was born from that spirit of using technology to educate.

Camarata: We were talking about what we could do for Heart Month. Last year we did something where you could share a glass of red wine with someone online, but we wanted to take it farther. So we came up with the Twitter-cast idea to pull back the curtain on something that happens every day in all of our hospitals.
Sartori: We already had a social media policy in place, but this wasn’t exactly addressed specifically because it had never been done before. We got risk management and hospital executives [to approve] it. It’s a little bit different from just getting a news camera in the operating room. But it didn’t take a lot of arm twisting with Dr. Macris.

Dr. Macris: When Natalie told us all about the Twitter idea, we all thought it would be a pretty straightforward thing, not a big deal in terms of the attention it got. I said, “How many people are we talking about following along?” They said, “Oh, maybe 50 or 100.”

Kerr: Once they told me that had a process in place for the 1% chance something got more complicated in the procedure, I felt comfortable for it to go forward.


Preparing for a Social Media First


Once hospital executives signed off on the plan, the team had to find a willing patient and figure out how exactly they would pull the thing off. Turns out, it wasn’t as complicated as they predicted: A patient of cardiologist Dr. Patel agreed to have his operation broadcast for the world to see.

Camarata: People on Twitter expects things to be instantaneous, in the moment. Twitter is now, so it’s the perfect medium to use, and you can add Twitpics and videos. So that’s why we chose that vehicle. Dr. Patel was the patient’s cardiologist and works directly with Dr. Macris, so it was a natural fit. He was very interested and excited about the opportunity and more than happy to take some online questions.

Dr. Patel: I’ve done lectures and sessions for the public for Heart Month, but that was a much more limited number of people to reach. This way, you’re able to reach a lot more people.

Kerr: People don’t just show up to the hospital and ask for treatment these days. They want to ask a lot of questions and know more about what’s happening with their bodies. This medium starts to address that. It’s a different thing, but it’s the right thing.

Camarata: There was no dry run. We tested Dr. Macris’s helmet camera a few times but there was no dry run.

Dr. Macris: This was an operation we perform so commonly that we know statistically we have a 99.9% confidence level it’s going to be fine. We didn’t want to do a high risk, complex case with any chance of the patient being compromised. It was the basketball equivalent of a slam dunk. But at the same time, you couldn’t take someone off the street and say, “Hey, go do this operation.” Anytime we do a heart surgery, it’s true that if we make a mistake someone could die as a direct consequence.


Under the Knife


Once the operation and social media broadcast began, it quickly became apparent the Memorial Hermann team had hit a home run.

Dr. Macris: I have to be honest, I had no clue what was going on. I was just doing my regular operations. At the time I had no idea what was going on beyond that.

Sartori: I was surprised at how much interest in generated from moment it started. That was the best part, generating so much awareness and interest right away.

Dr. Patel: I was surprised how many questions were coming in, and how much people already knew. Keeping the answers short was a little bit hard. There were restraints, but it wasn’t too bad.

Kerr: The patient’s sister was sitting right there while Dr. Patel answered questions. I asked if she was nervous. She said, “Yeah, but this is great. Normally I’d be sitting in a room by myself wondering what’s happening with my brother. Now I’m watching what’s happening and following along, so in some ways it’s much better.”


Aftermath


The event attracted media attention from around the world. Dr. Patel’s tweets were translated for readers as far away as Azerbaijan, India and China.

Kerr: Dr. Macris is Greek, and he’s been telling me about all these people in Greece watching it and all the comments he’s gotten from the other side of the world.

Dr. Macris: A lot of people were asking me if I was actually doing the tweeting. I always laugh — no, was just doing the operation. But I believe it was a resounding success. The only downside is I know a lot of people were kind of kicking themselves later. How did some solo practitioner in a community hospital garner all this attention? As opposed to really big hospitals, major medical centers, things like that.

Sartori: The biggest goal was to educate and raise awareness. That definitely happened, so from that standpoint it was a huge success.

Camarata: A few hospital systems have tweeted us back congratulations and things like that. A few have reached out to us for more on the mechanics of how it worked.

Dr. Macris: I would predict that similar things start happening more and more. Social media will be taken much more seriously by academia. It’s an incredibly powerful way to communicate with people. So to say that I think we’ll see more and more things like this would be a very easy prediction to make.

Source: Mashable

Social Media Spam Is Slamming Republican Candidates [INFOGRAPHIC]

The Republican candidates still in the race for the White House are getting blasted with social media spam, according to the social spam-fighting firm Impermium.

Mark Risher, the company’s CEO and founder, says Impermium has found that the same techniques used by social spammers advertising free iPads and Viagra are now being used to spread bogus political messages across social media, blogs and news sites.

Spambots, fake accounts and a look-alike “impersonator” accounts are all contributing to the spamathon. Sometimes they’re vicious, spreading often false information about a particular candidate. Other spammers are trying to sway your vote by promoting one of the presidential hopefuls.

Political spam got particularly bad during Super Tuesday, but it’s been a persistant problem throughout the Republican primary season. Approximately 85% of people reading political news on the web over the last few months have encountered at least one spam-based comment.

Impermium isn’t able to identify exactly who’s behind the attacks. However, the target is clear: Mitt Romney. The company estimated he’s getting between five and ten times as much social spam as the other Republican contenders.

Risher, formerly Yahoo’s email “spam czar,” started the company after he saw that spammers were refocusing their efforts from email to social media. Impermium scans the entire web to detect spam attacks before they’re carried out. The company’s technology is able to analyze the context of posts, which Risher says makes it better able to determine if a comment is authentic or spam.

“That builds a ‘credit score for the Internet,’ a reputation for each actor out there,” says Risher.
Twitter users who encounter spam can report it to @spam.


Have you noticed any political spam on your social media accounts over the past few months? Let us know in the comments below.

Thumbnail image courtesy of iStockphoto, pearleye

Source: Mashable

Saturday, 24 March 2012

Social Media and Trayvon Martin: Why Did It Take So Long to Care?

Trayvon Martin
We’re all talking about Trayvon Martin now. But why did it take so long, and where was social media when Martin’s family needed it most?

As I write this, Trayvon Martin, the 17-year-old African American teenager who was shot and killed in Florida by a neighborhood watchman is the Number 11 trend in Google Search Trends (which measures what people are searching for now). Number One? Kim Kardashian Flour Bomb. If the Internet and social media is a reflection of us, then it’s a sorry reflection, indeed.

On Twitter, the trend for “trayvonmartin,” was, according to Trendistic, virtually undetectable until March 17, almost a month after the teenager was shot on Feb. 26.  

In February and March there was relatively little national news about the shooting; early reports like this one on Trayvon Martin’s shooting offer few details and do not even question why the shooter was not arrested. Social media was focused on the Oscars (Martin was shot that same night) and new technology flowing out of Mobile World Congress. It took weeks for the #JusticeforTrayvon hashtag to emerge.

It appears the social outrage didn’t start until national media began reporting on the shooting and Trayvon Martin’s family called for the arrest of George Zimmerman, the man who, according to police, admitted shooting the boy. A lengthy story on Huffington Post about the controversy has around 600 tweets (it was shared over 6,000 times on Facebook) and there’s no call-to-action hashtag included in most of the retweets I saw.

In other words, more than a week after the shooting, it had not become an online movement. I get it — there was other news going on and sometimes it takes a while for the real-world outrage to convert into social action. Plus, it took a while for details, like the 911 calls made shortly after the shooting or Trayvon’s last phone call between him and his girlfriend made moments before he was shot, to emerge. These revelations helped fuel new outrage, which again began to generate fresh calls for action in the social space.

One of the few voices shouting loudly, clearly and consistently for “Justice for Trayvon” was CNN Commentator Roland Martin. His voluminous Twitter stream is full of Trayvon commentary, going back at least as far as March 12.

TrayvonMartin as a Trend on Twitter

Yet even as late as last week, #TrayvonMartin was little more than a blip on Twitter. Things started to change on Sunday and the hashtag has steadily risen in prominence throughout the week. Another hashtag #justicefortrayvon has followed a similar trajectory.

In the last 48 hours two events have helped propel the Trayvon Martin case to the forefront of social media conversation. First, Fox news commentator Geraldo Rivera blamed the hoodie Trayvon Martin was wearing for the teen’s death. “I am urging the parents of black and Latin youngsters particularly to not let their children go out wearing hoodies: I think the hoodie is as much responsible for Trayvon Martin’s death as George Zimmerman was,” Rivera said. (He later apologized for the comment.)

President Obama’s comments on the Whitehouse lawn also helped boost the social conversation. “If I had a son he would look like Trayvon,” Obama said.

These two events reignited passion online. Soon I saw dozens of tweets making reference to “hoodies”. Some were angry, others used humor to point out the ridiculousness of Rivera’s statement. On Trendistic, the word “hoodie” skyrocketed in prominence at 8AM yesterday morning and shows no signs of slowing down. Obama’s statement, which came around noon eastern time, was retweeted over and over again.

Trayvon Martin finally has momentum online. In the time since I started working on this, he moved from the number 11 trend to number nine. Even by the end of yesterday, his search trend still sat far behind Kim Kardashian’s flour bomb (a solid #1), a handful of sports figures, two Whitney Houston trends and The Hunger Games. Al Sharpton, the well-known activist who has stepped in to help spread the message about Trayvon, was briefly ahead of the teen in Google Trends. Looking now, he’s at number 15.

Hoodie as a Trend on Twitter

Twitter’s own US trends had #UgliestUniform at number 1 — actually number two if you count the promoted hash #FeelAlive. Number 9, in this case, was “Geraldo”. No #Trayvon or #TrayvonMartin, but “National Puppy Day,” (which was yesterday) actress Tori Spelling, retired running back Marion Barber and…well, you get the picture.

My son is the same age as Trayvon was. I can’t imagine how I would react if this happened to my family, but I know that I’d want the world to know, to share in my outrage. I’d expect social media to spring to action and champion my cause. It took a long time for this case to reach national prominence, but even after it did, it’s been a slow climb to the social explosion it became this week.

It would be ridiculous to expect people to stop searching for and tweeting about everyday, mundane and entertaining events while Trayvon’s family waits for action. On the other hand, when national figures like Steve Jobs and Whitney Houston die, all platforms turn to talk about their passing. When an unarmed African American teen is shot, the outrage, no matter how great, is still not enough to dominate the social landscape.

I don’t know what exactly this says about us as a social media culture, but I don’t think it’s anything good.

Source: Mashable

Pinterest Updates Privacy Policy, Terms of Service

The world’s 12 million pinning addicts have some changes headed their way.

Pinterest users will be held to new terms of service and have to follow updated acceptable use and privacy policies beginning April 6.

A Saturday morning email to users of the image-based social network from Pinterest CEO Ben Silbermann sheds some light on the reasoning behind the changes. It reads in part:
Over the last few weeks, we’ve been working on an update to our Terms. When we first launched Pinterest, we used a standard set of Terms.  We think that the updated Terms of Service, Acceptable Use Policy, and Privacy Policy are easier to understand and better reflect the direction our company is headed in the future.
The changes follow an influx of complaints and inquiries about the legality of Pinterest users essentially copying and pasting pictures, regardless of copyright, from the Internet onto pinboards.

In the notice to users, Pinterest also responds to questions about the bookmarking site making money from pins. Pinterest has only acknowledged profitting from pins directing users to buy products on merchant sites.
“Our original Terms stated that by posting content to Pinterest you grant Pinterest the right for us to sell your content,” reads the email. “Selling content was never our intention and we removed this from our updated Terms.”

Another addition to the all-public pinboard system will be private pinning. When that will become available is not yet known, however.

Silbermann said a Pinterest API is on the way, too, meaning we’ll likely see more Pinterest-related applications soon. The API will allow developers to build applications using or revolving around Pinterest. Consumers will be more likely to show their image-and-text pins on third-party websites, and developers are already tracking the release of the API. An unofficial Pinterest API group on Facebook has more than 870 members.

There is also a shift on what users can pin. New pinning restrictions cover content that “[Pinterest] deem[s] to be hateful, violent, harmful, abusive, racially or ethnically offensive, defamatory, etc.” Pictures relating to harm, death, disability or disfigurement to yourself, other people or animals are prohibited.

SEE ALSO: The Copyright Question: How to Protect Yourself on Pinterest

The updated terms and policies attempt to bring the answers users have been seeking to the forefront. Pinterest explains they made the usage guidelines bare-bones to facilitate comprehension. Sections are numbered with several explainers.

The old terms of service simply laid out sections like how Pinterest works, general prohibitions, liability and eligibility. Now, there are specifications to how the company and other users can use content that is posted publicly.

There is also a new section about terminating accounts, which details how long your pins will stay on the network. The answer? “Pinterest may retain your User Content for a commercially reasonable period of time for backup, archival, or audit purposes.”

Expect more changes to Pinterest as the social network continues to grow in popularity.

“Like everything at Pinterest, these updates are a work in progress that we will continue to improve upon.”
Do you think these changes are good for Pinterest? Let us know in the comments.

Source: Mashable

How Google Is Making YouTube More Like iMovie [EXCLUSIVE]

youtube-thumbs-600If you’ve been seeing a strip of thumbnails along the bottom of YouTube videos lately, you’re not seeing things.

The site has been quietly rolling out a feature that automatically generates thumbnails of every moment in a video, laying them all out the way a video-editing app like iMovie would.

When you’re just sitting back and watching, the thumbnails are invisible. But try dragging the playback dot along the red strip at the bottom of the video to find an exact frame.

If you hover your mouse pointer anywhere on the red strip, a thumbnail of that specific moment pops up, letting you easily see what you’ll see before you jump.

YouTube product manager Nundu Janakiram says the site introduced the feature because many users were trying to find exact moments, or see a particular moment in context with the rest of the video. There was a more subtle motivator, too.

“You’re at your computer and everything on this page is very interactive. You can subscribe, you can like, you can leave a comment, you can click on related videos. We wanted to make the video itself feel interactive, so it doesn’t feel like just this black box.”

For some of YouTube’s long-form content, the standard red strip doesn’t quite give users precise control to really target a specific moment. With videos longer than 90 minutes, a secondary slider appears when mousing over, so a user can zero in on moments like so:

youtube-thumbs-zoom

The thumbnails feature isn’t on every video yet — Janakiram says they’re limited to just some videos with more than 1,000 views. The feature is available worldwide. The goal is to eventually bring thumbnails to all videos on the site.

Considering over an hour of video is uploaded to YouTube every minute, that’s a lot of thumbnails. The task of creating, storing and serving up that many images is something only a company on the scale of Google can achieve. And even then it’s pretty hard.

SEE ALSO: YouTube vs. Hulu: Which is the Future of Online Video?

“One of the big challenges was we didn’t want to compromise on the speed at which we serve these images, or the quality,” says Nils Krahnstoever, the software engineer responsible for scaling the thumbnails to YouTube vast amount of video. “The system actually provides images at multiple resolutions — initially when you [mouseover a point] you see a lower-resolution version of the image, but we increase the resolution of it as we fetch additional data.”

“That’s especially cool,” Janakiram said. “We generate tons of these thumbnails, yet when you use this feature it feels almost magical. If there was a lag, it would really detract from the user experience.”
As magical as the new thumbnails are, there’s one thing they can’t do: give you more options for the representative thumb when you upload a video. The storyboards aren’t tied to uploading, so you still only get three to choose from.

Also, you won’t be able to see the thumbnails on mobile devices, though Janakiram says they’re exploring it.
How do you like YouTube’s new thumbnail feature? Let us know in the comments.

Source: Mashable

Twitter Reviews ‘The Hunger Games’ in 140 Characters or Less

The Hunger Games grossed $19.7 million from its midnight showings across the U.S., making it the seventh highest grossing midnight showing ever — and the highest-grossing non-sequel.

The film has garnered a massive amount of buzz on social media through Lionsgate’s online promotion campaign. In addition to its hype, The Hunger Games has also earned a largely positive response from critics. Currently, the film has earned an 87% fresh rating from Rotten Tomatoes and a 68 from Metacritic.

Twitter also responded strongly to the film. After the east coast midnight showings let out, Hunger Games-related topics began trending on Twitter. At 3:46 a.m. “Jennifer Lawrence,” “Rue,” “Peeta” and “Catching Fire” were all trending.

SEE ALSO: 20 Hilarious ‘Hunger Games’ Memes Taking Over the Web

Check out some reactions to the film from Twitter users. What kind of reactions to The Hunger Games have you seen on your Twitter feed?


Image courtesy of Lionsgate/Murray Close

Source: Mashable