Visualize Big Data with Flowing Media

Posted on April 16th, 2010 in Industrial, Social Media | Comments Off

As a recent article in The Economist observed, we are at the point of an "industrial revolution of data," with vast amounts of digital information being created, stored and analyzed. The rise of "big data" has led in turn to an increased demand for tools to both analyze and visualize the information. This bodes well for startups tackling the field. One new service is Flowing Media , the new company of Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg, a consultancy focused on data visualization services. Sponsor Prior to founding Flowing Media, Viégas and Wattenberg worked for IBM's Visual Communications Lab . Their Many Eyes project was one of the first to put visualization tools in the hands of the public, with the goal of democratizing visualization and the accompanying social analysis. According to Viégas and Wattenberg, visualization is a powerful analytical tool for experts and non-experts. "It's an excellent way to attract non-geeks to complex data and can spark conversation." They note that a good visualization can easily go viral on the Web, touching millions of people. As "big data" becomes more accessible, visualization services like Flowing Media are sure to flourish. After all, as Viégas and Wattenberg note, "Today many facets of life are made of nothing but data, from flirting on Facebook to photos on Flickr." Image credits: Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenberg, top: Wired Magazine - "A visualization of thousands of Wikipedia edits that were made by a single software bot. Each color corresponds to a different page." and bottom: Flickr Flow , the colors in photos uploaded to Flickr. Discuss

visualization april10 Visualize Big Data with Flowing Media

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Visualize Big Data with Flowing Media

What Websites Do You Like? New Twitter Tool Will Tell You

Posted on April 14th, 2010 in Social Media | Comments Off

The Website Taste Predictor is a new Twitter tool that analyzes your Twitter account in order to recommend websites you would like. The project uses Twitter's OAuth authentication protocol to access your Twitter account so you don't have to enter in your username and password in order to try it out. How exactly it works, we can't say. There's no "about" page, "FAQ" or other explanation. In fact, there's not even a credit as to who made it, only a URL. But the URL is a big hint: it's hosted on the MIT.edu domain underneath the subheading ~peretti. And just who is ~peretti? Only the co-founder of the Huffington Post and the viral tracker BuzzFeed , Jonah Peretti . Sponsor New Twitter Tool From HuffPo and BuzzFeed Co-Founder? Peretti is a graduate of the MIT Media Lab, has taught at NYU and the Parsons School of Design, consulted for major brands like Sony Pictures and Procter & Gamble and created several viral experiments like the Nike sweatshop email and FundRace.org . However, he's best known for co-founding BuzzFeed , The Huffington Post , ContagiousMedia.org , and the Eyebeam Open Lab . So if this "Website Taste Predictor" is also his creation (we've contacted him to confirm), you know it's not going to be your run-of-the-mill Twitter tool. For what it's worth, we're nearly 100% sure about Peretti's involvement. The tool is hosted under his account on MIT's servers , he tweeted about it back on April 7th and he responded personally to a comment about it over on Digg (the fact that this post never hit homepage it a testament to all that is going wrong over there). However, while these clues seem to point to Peretti as the creator, you can never be too sure. We'll wait for an official word and will update accordingly. Website Taste Predictor in Action So what does the Taste Predictor actually do? Well, it doesn't just parse your Twitter history to spit back a list of links you've tweeted. That would be too easy. It appears to delve deeper than that to function as a true recommendation engine. Whether it looks at keywords, follower lists or sites related to those you post links to, we can't be sure, but we do know this: the app gets it right on the money. And I mean downright scary right. In my case, for example, the list returned included a large group of sites I read regularly consisting mainly tech-focused blogs and mainstream media sites plus a handful of sites I've been known to check out less often. What I don't know is how it figured out that I've been known to gaze at the occasional lolcat , fail photo , web comic or celebrity

Facebook Launches Safety Center: Educating Users on How Facebook Did Them Wrong

Posted on April 13th, 2010 in Social Media | Comments Off

"Safety is Facebook's top priority," writes Facebook's Chief Security Officer Joe Sullivan on a company blog post introducing the social network's new Safety Center , a revamped help portal featuring educational information for users, with sections dedicated to parents, teens, teachers and law enforcement professionals. It's a somewhat ironic statement from a company that recently prompted its 400+ million users to accept "recommended" changes that opened up their data - including status updates, photos, videos, links and friend lists - to a public audience, revealing details that many users assumed were private. Sponsor Around the same time as the "privacy debacle," as we like to call it , unfolded, Facebook also announced a "Safety Advisory Board," a group whose purpose is to review safety-related procedures and documentation as well as make suggestions regarding best practices and other procedures. How about this safe practice, Facebook: don't publicize people's private information? Are we bitter about Facebook's changes? OK, maybe a little. After all, many of us joined up with the network when it was in its fledgling stages. When it was a place to hide from mom and dad, not communicate with them. When you could complain about work in a status update and not worry that your boss or an HR department would see it. What's a Little Cyberbullying Among Friends? But the world changed and Facebook changed with it, or at least that's what CEO Mark Zuckerberg claims . The oversharers of the iGeneration have generally shrugged their shoulders at the threat of their private photos and updates having gone public. Their outrage? Practically non-existent. After all, this is the same group who grew up around sex offender scandals on MySpace, posted sexy " MySpace angles " photos mom and dad would be shocked to see and who developed the trend of " sexting ," texting revealing pictures to their crush du jour. So their status updates are public? Who cares? , they think. Ah, but they should. The publicizing of private data has led to a host of issues in its wake, including harassment and cyberbullying, to name a few. Cases of teens committing suicide after becoming victim to abuse via social networks has also occurred, unfortunately. Now one could argue that cyberbullying and the like could occur among groups of friends, whether or not Facebook remained a private network. It's a valid contention - the dark underbelly of the human condition allows such behavior to exist, even amongst friends. But by exposing every little detail, photo and link to a user base who seems oblivious to the need of plugging the privacy holes, Facebook is simply allowing there to be more opportunity for someone to actually see the nasty comment made about them on a wall post...or the embarrassing photo of someone cheating on their boyfriend/girlfriend/spouse. It provides the fodder for the cyberbullies and the tools for those who seek to stalk, monitor or control another's behavior. It's provides more avenues for abuse. At the very least, it should provide a few tools to the potential victims, too. Safety Center: Q&A's on Abuse Prevention, Reporting That's what the Safety Center is for, at least in part. With Q&A's for how to deal with abuse, stalking, cyberbullying and unwanted wall posts, messages and chats, a good bit of the Center's guidance is aimed at reporting and stopping this unwanted behavior. Even in other Safety Center sections outside of "safety for teens," this information is essentially just rehashed for others, like parents and teachers, for example. (Teachers and law enforcement professionals get a few extra tips about Facebook, too, like how to maintain a professional presence or how to report a sex offender). According to the Facebook blog post, the Safety Center's overhaul now features quadruple the information as in the prior help center plus a "cleaner, more navigable" interface. The launch is one of the first initiatives from the Facebook Advisory Board, a new coalition of members including Common Sense Media, ConnectSafely, WiredSafety, Childnet International and The Family Online Safety Institute (FOSI). Together, the board members will "accelerate our efforts to make Facebook a better and safer place to engage," notes Sullivan. But Facebook already had an opportunity to make itself a safer place and they blew it. Private networks of friends and family sharing content amongst themselves doesn't lead to as much harassment, abuse and victimization of its users beyond the typical family brawl or fight amongst friends. But when you can see anyone's content - especially the stuff they thought was private - problems are going to occur. Facebook's new Safety Center is the result of the company having to deal with the fallout from that choice. Discuss

facebook tc50 Facebook Launches Safety Center: Educating Users on How Facebook Did Them Wrong

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Facebook Launches Safety Center: Educating Users on How Facebook Did Them Wrong

What’s Next For Mobile Apps?

Posted on April 13th, 2010 in Social Media | Comments Off

Yesterday we looked at DASH7 , a wireless sensor networking standard that may play an important part in next generation mobile services - including location-based services, Internet of Things and social networking. In this post we analyze some use cases for DASH7, which also point to where the Mobile Web is heading. We'll explore long distance mobile advertising and mobile coupons. We'll also look at how location-based services like Foursquare and Gowalla could evolve. Sponsor Extending Location-Based App Functionality Given the growth of location-based apps such as Foursquare and Gowalla in 2010, it's intriguing to think about what's next for these services. According to the DASH7 report, enhanced loyalty programs could be the next big thing. With a DASH7-enabled phone, the white paper states, "a user could set his or her preferences in the Foursquare or Gowalla application that would allow the user to be automatically "discovered" or "checked in" at the coffee shop/restaurant/gun store/etc. and thereby accrue loyalty points passively, i.e. by just being "in" the establishment, rather than requiring active/conscious user behavior to participate in the program." Even more advanced services could offer customized promotions created "on the fly", targeting a certain user's preferences. Mobile Advertising From Long Distance and On-The-Go A long-held goal of the Mobile Web - at least for retailers - is using mobile phones for mobile advertising, loyalty programs, couponing, and other 'personalized shopping' experiences. Of course there are privacy issues with these things, but nevertheless these scenarios are (finally) coming soon. NFC-enabled phones have shown glimpses of this functionality, via smart posters, kiosks and billboards. As discussed in a previous post, NFC technology is limited to a 4 centimeter range - so the phone needs to be held close to the media asset in order to initiate the data transfer. Also it requires a tag reader application to be installed on your mobile phone. According to an as yet unreleased white paper that ReadWriteWeb was shown, the DASH7 Alliance thinks that "a far larger set of customers would be willing to execute the same applications provided that they were executable a) from a longer distance, b) while moving, and c) in some cases, passively/without any conscious initiation of their own." DASH7 has a range of hundreds of meters and can be used while on the move. While point 3 might scare some privacy advocates, it's very likely that customers would need to opt in before they "passively" received such advertising messages. If this is still to abstract for you, here's a potential scenario: I'm driving down a street and I pass a smart poster pasted onto a building wall. This elicits a beep from my phone, because my phone has 'passively' scanned the poster and discovered something that I want to be notified about (I've opted into receiving notifications only about certain things). Because it's against the law to check my mobile phone where I live, I wait till I'm parked and then I check what the beep was for. Turns out that one of my favorite bands is playing in the city tomorrow night! The smart poster I'd driven past was an advertisement for that band. So I then proceed to book a ticket, using my phone of course. Mobile Coupons Mobile coupons are a hot area of activity already, with Google and others offering them. However, currently mobile coupons are limited to short-range and active receiving. Soon we might have long-range couponing, real-time interaction and 'passively' receiving coupons. The DASH7 Alliance white paper offers a scenario of Paramount promoting its upcoming movie Iron Man 2, using a smart poster. In the NFC scenario, someone could walk past the Iron Man 2 poster and download a 2-for-1 coupon to see the movie. However, according to the DASH7 Alliance: "...a combination DASH7/NFC-enabled smartphone could still support the default NFC scenario, but could also provide for a) longer distance distribution of the coupon b) "passive" acquisition of coupons according to a user's pre-defined "coupon acquisition criteria" (e.g. "auto-accept coupons for any movies starring Al Pacino" , and c) real-time interaction with the media asset (e.g. "answer the following three questions correctly and win a 2-for-1 coupon to see "Iron Man 2".)" Those are just some of the next generation mobile services we can expect to see soon, thanks to wireless technologies like NFC and DASH7. Let us know in the comments if you have other potential use case ideas! Discuss

dash7 phone Whats Next For Mobile Apps?

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What's Next For Mobile Apps?

Google’s Schmidt to Bloggers: Drop Dead!

Posted on April 12th, 2010 in Social Media | Comments Off

Google's CEO Eric Schmidt addressed the American Society of News Editors yesterday in D.C. As part of an apparent strategy of mollifying the media, he insulted the integrity and professionalism of bloggers and the quality of blogs. You know. Like this one. "There is an art to what you do," he said to the real journalists. "And if you're ever confused as to the value of newspaper editors, look at the blog world. That's all you need to see. So we understand how fundamental tradition and the things you care about are." Sponsor My hand to G-d, I'm not even sure where to begin with this one. First, I am a journalist. I mean an I-worked-for-a-newspaper, I-was-a-stringer-for-Reuters, I-was-a-host-for-NPR, I-freelanced-for-Newsweek type journalist, the sort of journalist our CEO friend was presumably talking about. But I've also been a blogger since 2004. This blog I now write for is in the top ten of blogs for readership and has a sterling rep for...can you guess? JOURNALISM, you blowhard. How many journalists blog? How many bloggers are journalists? How many blogs are chockablock with journalism? This motif of the whirly-eyed blogger in his pajamas was getting stale before I started my blog. (And for the record, I haven't owned pajamas since I was old enough to shave.) "We have goals in common," Schmidt oozed. "Google believes in the power of information. We believe that it's better to have more information than less." Well. It's funny he should mention that. Schmidt, if you've been rusticating outside the Kuiper belt, first attracted journalistic attention, for more than his balliwick as head bean-counter at Google, when he blackballed all CNET journalists . This was a reaction to a journalist doing her job. In response to his pooh-poohing privacy questions, Elinor Mills Googled him and then published what she found. How...dare she? He's also gained some WTF-points by trying to silence his alleged former mistress, Kate Bohmer. She had what appeared to be a fictionalized portrait of him on her blog until he marshaled a horde of lawyer-bots and sicced them on her. But being creepy is not enough to warrant coverage, not on this blog anyway. The problem is, Schmidt's actions create a pattern of hypocrisy in relationship to the information and privacy issues on which he has so frequently pontificated. If Schmidt were the CEO of the world's largest culvert manufacturer, it would hardly matter. But he isn't and it does. Schmidt is a man who guides one of the world's largest online information chaebols . He sets, or influences, policy that affects millions of people. And his Byronesque declamations of Google's position in the moral vanguard of the Internet age seem difficult to countenance when they are set off at every turn with actions that contravene the company's public values. Maybe Google needs some sort of guiding trope, a first-principal that all of its people could refer to; something that, if Google employees found themselves unable to harmonize with it, would oblige them to give notice and maybe run off to develop more efficient well-poisoning systems for orphanages. Something like... DON'T BE EVIL. Discuss

schmidt Googles Schmidt to Bloggers: Drop Dead!

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Google's Schmidt to Bloggers: Drop Dead!