August, 2009

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Social Media Revolution?

Collaboration 2.0

Here’s another YouTube video - ‘Social Media Revolution’ - conflating a lot of stats in order to make a case for ‘Social Media‘ being the ‘biggest shift since the industrial revolution‘ Web 2.0…The Machine is Us/ing Us started this style of delivery and really amplified the potency of the Web 2.0 movement in 1997.

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All Business Starts With A Community

John Battelle's Searchblog

Today I was on my way back to our house after dropping my kids off to camp, and I decided to stop by a local cafe for a quick coffee-n-chat. Now, in August, "our house" means a century-old family place on an island, an island that rather pugnaciously refuses to allow large chain stores to set down roots. So it's fair to say that this island is sort of a Galapagos of small business.

IT 95
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David Kralik – A World that Works

Daradiction

My pal David Kralik has a vison of a world that works, and offers practical, common sense ‘trans-party’ solutions. This is part of the “Google Talks&# Series that’s interesting to follow. David is lots of fun to hang out with too. He’s a man on a mission. Worth the hour. Click here to view the embedded video.

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German Data Protection Authority Issues € 36,000 Fine Against Lidl for Collection of Employee Health Data

Hunton Privacy

On August 19, 2009, the state DPA in North Rhine-Westphalia fined a subsidiary of the discount supermarket chain Lidl €36,000 (approximately $51,000) for illegally keeping records of employee health data. The case was triggered by a report in the German news magazine Der Spiegel. A Bochum resident found papers and forms containing Lidl employees’ health data in a trash bin at a car wash and forwarded them to the magazine.

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Prevent Data Breaches With Zero-Trust Enterprise Password Management

Keeper Security is transforming cybersecurity for people and organizations around the world. Keeper’s affordable and easy-to-use solutions are built on a foundation of zero-trust and zero-knowledge security to protect every user on every device. Our next-generation privileged access management solution deploys in minutes and seamlessly integrates with any tech stack to prevent breaches, reduce help desk costs and ensure compliance.

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The Unobserved Need

Positively RIM

Last week I traveled to rural Indiana to research a case study of a mid-size manufacturing firm. While the subject is interesting in its own right, it is symbolic of a huge, unobserved need. In the U.S. alone, there are close to 100,000 small to mid-size businesses. Different numbers define this SMB group, but I see it as organizations with between 100 and 1,000 staffers.

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Shock Horror 'Social Media': Who Will Save/Train the Children?

Collaboration 2.0

An interesting US national poll from Common Sense Media asking ‘is social networking changing childhood?‘ opens up some wider issues. Common sense media suggest their poll… …illustrates a continuing disconnect between parents and kids when it comes to kids’ digital lives. In today’s society, there is more technology and less time for parents to supervise their kids’ actions and [.

IT 89
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Apple: Is The Worm Turning?

John Battelle's Searchblog

Early this year, well, January 1, to be exact, I made this prediction about our friends at Apple: Apple will see a significant reversal of recent fortunes. I sense this will happen for a number of reasons. but I think the main one will be brand related - a brand based on being cooler than the other guy simply does not scale past a certain point. I sense Apple has hit that point.

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Do you have any examples of where any sort of civic engagement outreach/campaigns affected legislation?

Daradiction

Hey gang- Huge BIG favor that might be really easy for you. Do you have any examples of where any sort of civic engagement outreach/campaign affected legislation? I’m looking for more granular examples than a response like “the civil rights movement&# , but more so examples of specific petitions or letter writing campaigns that might have contributed to getting some sort of legislation passed.

IT 55
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FTC and HHS Issue Final Breach Notification Rules

Hunton Privacy

On August 17, the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) issued a final rule (“FTC Final Rule”) addressing security breaches of personal health records (“PHRs”). The FTC Final Rule applies to all breaches discovered on or after September 24, 2009, and to “foreign and domestic vendors of personal health records, PHR related entities, and third party service providers” that “maintain information of U.S. citizens or residents.

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Optimizing The Modern Developer Experience with Coder

Many software teams have migrated their testing and production workloads to the cloud, yet development environments often remain tied to outdated local setups, limiting efficiency and growth. This is where Coder comes in. In our 101 Coder webinar, you’ll explore how cloud-based development environments can unlock new levels of productivity. Discover how to transition from local setups to a secure, cloud-powered ecosystem with ease.

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Early July Data: Twitter Growing, but Slowly

John Battelle's Searchblog

A month ago I posted that Twitter was back to strong growth after a weak month of June. I just took at look at the numbers for August, which you can see in the screen shot here (I'm using Compete's data , but you can check out Quantcast , which is a "rough estimate" and has not posted any July data yet.). Twitter is still growing, according to this data, but not at the breakneck pace of the past.

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Caffeine: A Fundamental Rewrite of Google, A Shift to Real Time

John Battelle's Searchblog

Matt Cutts points to a video interview (embedded above) on Google's Caffeine infrastructure update. "It's a pretty fundamentally big change" Matt says. What I'd like to know is why and in response to what changes on the web. Of course, the major changes in how the web works are clear: Real Time Search. In this post (and/or this one ) I said: In short, Google represents a remarkable achievement: the ability to query the static web.

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When Collaboration is Literally Life or Death.

Collaboration 2.0

For those who think collaboration technology simply breaks down rigid command and control management hierarchies, consider the origins of the term: the military. The US military have had a significant online presence with various online forums for rank and file, commanders and other lines of business - all behind user name and password of course - [.

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Strategic Thinking before Operational Actions: The Enterprise 2.0 Tool Cargo Cult Problem

Collaboration 2.0

Three posts about ‘failure’ in the ‘Enterprise 2.0′ space in the last few days from Sameer Patel (’Five ways to avoid Enterprise 2.0 failure’ guest blogging on Michael Krigmans’ ‘IT Failure blog here on ZD Net), Dion Hinchcliffe (14 Reasons Why Enterprise 2.0 Projects Fail) and now Dennis Howlett (Enterprise 2.0: what a crock).

IT 78
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15 Modern Use Cases for Enterprise Business Intelligence

Large enterprises face unique challenges in optimizing their Business Intelligence (BI) output due to the sheer scale and complexity of their operations. Unlike smaller organizations, where basic BI features and simple dashboards might suffice, enterprises must manage vast amounts of data from diverse sources. What are the top modern BI use cases for enterprise businesses to help you get a leg up on the competition?

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The iPhone Telephony Tragedy

Collaboration 2.0

I’ve got a first gen iPhone and live in San Francisco, the heart of Apple country. The voice communication part of it has been slowly getting worse and is now virtually unusable. A first gen iphone is of course ancient history to an Apple or Mobile Tech fanboy but the reality is many people are [.

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Tell Me This Ain't Facebook, Er, Twitter, Er, Both.

John Battelle's Searchblog

Google's new iGoogle upgrades smacks of Facebook. Read this: we're excited to introduce social gadgets for iGoogle. Social gadgets let you share, collaborate and play games with your friends on top of all the things you can already do on your homepage. The 19 social gadgets we're debuting today offer many new ways to make your homepage more useful and fun.

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What's Up With Feedburner?

John Battelle's Searchblog

For the best few days, I've been trying to edit the settings in my Feedburner account - the RSS feeds service that was once so useful, but since its purchase by Google, seems to have languished. Unfortunately, it seems I've forgotten my password (though I used the same one for Feedburner as many other similar services), and the user name I thought I always used is getting bounced back to me as not recognized.

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Social Media Is Important, The Video

John Battelle's Searchblog

Hey, I really like the soundtrack. And it's f*ing true as well. My beef with this is this simple statement, about 3:42 in. "Social Media isn't a fad, it's a fundamental shift in how we communicate.". True, to a point. What it really is, is the release of how we already communicate, but now at scale. It's not a shift in *how* we communicate, it's a step function in our *ability* to communicate.

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The Tumultuous IT Landscape Is Making Hiring More Difficult

After a year of sporadic hiring and uncertain investment areas, tech leaders are scrambling to figure out what’s next. This whitepaper reveals how tech leaders are hiring and investing for the future. Download today to learn more!

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Don't Be A Fan Platform Hater

John Battelle's Searchblog

Regarding this story in the New York Times : With Bloggers in the Bleachers, Leagues See a Threat to Profits. (and related, my post on " Don't Be a Player Platform Hater "): I have such a rant in me on this topic but I simply cannot write it now, I'm way to Supposed to Be On Vacation. But suffice to say, you can do two things if you "own content" - like, say, football games (yep, that's content).

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Google Search Share Declines

John Battelle's Searchblog

Back when I predicted this in January , I recall worrying I was calling it too early. Now it appears the timing was about right. From Mashable : while Google grew from June to July, it still lost market share to its competitors – from 66.1% in June to 64.8% in July, a 1.3 percentage point drop. From my prediction: 3. Google will see search share decline significantly for the first time ever.

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Anticipating Sharepoint 2010: Making Enterprise Foundations More Flexible?

Collaboration 2.0

Last weekend’s New York Times technology section piece about Microsoft Sharepoint is still their ninth most emailed tech story nearly a week later. ‘Microsoft’s SharePoint Thrives in the Recession‘ is very general: Companies like Ferrari, Starbucks and Viacom have used SharePoint to create their public-facing Web sites and for various other tasks. but “We don’t claim we do everything,” [.

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Cisco's Brave New World

Collaboration 2.0

An intriguing and very well written article in this week’s Economist documents Cisco CEO John Chamber’s ambitious plans to conquer 30 new areas of business: …From “virtual health care” to “cloud computing” and “safety and security” to “routers in space”, the company is tackling more than 30 “market adjacencies”, as new areas of growth are called [.

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Improving the Accuracy of Generative AI Systems: A Structured Approach

Speaker: Anindo Banerjea, CTO at Civio & Tony Karrer, CTO at Aggregage

When developing a Gen AI application, one of the most significant challenges is improving accuracy. This can be especially difficult when working with a large data corpus, and as the complexity of the task increases. The number of use cases/corner cases that the system is expected to handle essentially explodes. 💥 Anindo Banerjea is here to showcase his significant experience building AI/ML SaaS applications as he walks us through the current problems his company, Civio, is solving.

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Facebook Lite?

John Battelle's Searchblog

Multiple sources are reporting Facebook is testing "Facebook Lite" - what some are calling a Twitter version of Facebook. Mashable , RWW have more, TC got an official response from Facebook, which makes it sound like it's not a Twitter competitor. Interesting. Reminds me of my prediction on the two companies back in January: Facebook will build a Twitter competitor, but it will never leave beta and will ultimately be abandoned as not worth the time.

IT 63
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Two Big News Events in Search: Google To Revise Its Engine, Facebook Launches Realtime

John Battelle's Searchblog

Facebook's previously announced realtime engine has been released, coverage from Mashable: Fast forward to today: Facebook just announced that it is rolling out the new Facebook search. With realtime search and FriendFeed in its pocket, Facebook is gunning directly for Twitter. Also for Mashable, a story on Google's " major revision " of its engine.

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On Using Search for Decisions

John Battelle's Searchblog

As part of BingTweets , an FM/Microsoft promotion blending the two services, I was asked to opine on the idea of how we use the web to make decisions. My first post has been up for a while but I managed to lose track of time and forgot to let you all know about it. I wrote a piece called " Decisions are Never Easy - So Far " - and have already written a followup piece, though that one is yet to be published.

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Give Me Your Data, Said the Spider to the Fly

John Battelle's Searchblog

(image). Very interesting news yesterday about Google Adsense and competing ad networks. From ClickZ: Google plans to open its AdSense network to other ad networks, potentially giving the already huge ad net access to display ads flowing through countless other networks. The firm yesterday said it will allow networks to bid via auction to have their ads appear on AdSense partner sites, like an exchange.

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Driving Responsible Innovation: How to Navigate AI Governance & Data Privacy

Speaker: Aindra Misra, Senior Manager, Product Management (Data, ML, and Cloud Infrastructure) at BILL

Join us for an insightful webinar that explores the critical intersection of data privacy and AI governance. In today’s rapidly evolving tech landscape, building robust governance frameworks is essential to fostering innovation while staying compliant with regulations. Our expert speaker, Aindra Misra, will guide you through best practices for ensuring data protection while leveraging AI capabilities.

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Who gets to decide what you want?

Daradiction

Seth Godin continues to inspire me with his insights, simple yet so practical. Who gets to decide what you want? When George Washington was a teenager, did he really, really, really want a car? Unlikely. In order to want something, you probably need to know it exists. But my guess is that it surely helps if you’ve been marketed to. One definition of happiness is wanting the things you’re likely to get (or, conversely, not wanting the unattainable).

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Don't Be A Player Platform Hater

John Battelle's Searchblog

I've been meaning to post a long-ish rant on the importance of celebrities taking control of their own platforms, but never gotten to it, in part because I'm not that enamored with the incessant selling of celebrity that occurs in our culture. Yeah, I sound like a grumpy old man, but I can't help myself. It bums me out - not because I don't like celebrities, but because the current approach strikes me as driven by short term thinking.

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Bartz: Yahoo Was "Never a Search Company". Me: Bullsh*t.

John Battelle's Searchblog

Sorry, it's late, and I just saw this piece in the NYT. But for Bartz to say that Yahoo was never a search company is simply not true. Yahoo was the original search destination, and a place folks first learned to "search" for stuff on the Web. As the original directory of things worth paying attention on the Web, Yahoo was - and remains for many - the definitive place to start a search query.