Archive for the ‘ Mobile ’ Category

Are Free Apps Robbing You Blind?

Monday, April 30, 2012 posted by admin 9:35 am

Free Apps steal your info“There’s an app for that.” How many times have we all heard that phrase during the past couple of years? Allow me to put it into better perspective for you. During the last week of 2011, 1.2B apps were downloaded, with 242M apps being downloaded on Christmas day alone. While that number may seem staggering, it is even more so when one considers that less than 11B apps were downloaded in all of 2010. Add to that the fact that it is predicted that the number of mobile apps offered by companies will jump by a factor of 10 in 2012, and it is clear that the public’s App-etite is clearly uncontrollable.

FACT: As of December 2011, there were nearly 1M applications available to the public, with nearly 2,000 new apps being published on a daily basis.

While some apps are commercial, where consumers are charged a few dollars to download and use them, a vast number of them are given away for free. ..or, are they? While an app may be free to download, that doesn’t mean the app developer isn’t looking to benefit.

For example: A recent Wall Street Journal article that examined 100 of the most popular Facebook apps found that some apps seek not only the email addresses, current location and sexúal preference of users, but also of their Facebook friends. One Yahoo service powered by Facebook requests access to a person’s religious and political leanings as a condition for using it. The popular Skype service for making online telephone calls seeks the Facebook photos and birthdays of its users and their friends.

What the article didn’t reveal is that the WSJ isn’t immune from this phenomenon, since its own app, WSJ Social, collects data from its readers, including profile information, email address and the ability to post an update whenever a subscriber reads an article.

While you may recall the recent firestorm that raged over Google’s new privacy policy, no one seemed to mind that other search engines, social networks, affilìate marketers and app purveyors were busy at work collecting, analyzing and selling our personal information as well. Perhaps the reason that so many journalists were asleep at the switch with regards to sweeping changes taking place in cyberspace is due to the fact that until recently the ability to collect and control vast amounts of personal information about every man, woman and child online was a non-starter. Of course, this was in a time before most people were wired to the web 24/7 via a host of devices capable of transmitting information at will.

Let’s face it, capitalizing on personal data has never been easier or more lucrative. Facebook, which is slated to go public in May to the tune of $100B or more, is hip deep in turning personal data into gold. When it comes to collecting personal information, social networks in general and Facebook in particular are king. From the get go when you sign up for a social network, you are asked a myriad of questions concerning everything from your age and sëx, to likes, dislikes, movies and books you have seen and read, photos, videos and much more. Then you are encouraged to share even more personal information on a daily basis about yourself and your friends. Last but not least, you are expected to willingly proselytize the network to friends and family. That in effect is the very essence of social networking. It is also the source of the network’s revenue, since their profìts are derived chiefly via advertising.

With the growth of mobìle marketing, it wasn’t long before social networks began to break out of the box and onto our phones. Getting back to the Wall Street Journal’s examination of the 100 most popular Facebook apps, ” The app that sought the widest array of personal information of the 100 examined, “MyPad for iPad,” has a two-paragraph privacy policy that says it is “adding Privacy settings shortly.” Privacy policies that describe how they collect, use and share data are required by Facebook. The app maker couldn’t be reached for comment.”

The article goes onto state that, “By virtue of its size and user base of 800-million-plus people, Facebook is at the heart of the personal data economy. Popular apps can quickly go ‘viral’ there and gain millìons of users – but can also flame out just as quickly. This explains why some apps seek to benefit by gathering as much data as possible and hoping to find ways to earn revenue from it.”

While apps are technically required to get permission to access users Facebook data, the way in which the permission is couched, namely in a way that would make the app virtually non-functioning if you deny access, makes it a sure bet that users will almost always grant access. One of the items that the app makers don’t tell the public is the fact that while Facebook tries to restrict app makers from sharing the data collected with any company that hasn’t signed an agreement with Facebook, this isn’t always the case.

“Data obtained from PrivacyChoice show that several dozen widely used apps are using unapproved companies, most notably Google, the biggest onlìne ad company. That means app users can be tracked within their apps by Google and others. Google said advertisers using its DoubleClick ad services agree to terms that prohibit the collection of any personally identifiable information.”

While the WSJ article concerned itself with Facebook apps, if the world’s largest social network and the world’s largest search engine are not above breaching each other’s privacy policies, what is the likelihood that many of their smaller and hungrier brethren in the world of advertising online are above bending the rules?

Multinational corporations for one have seen the light when it comes to the advantages of apps. The popularity of mobile apps is now seen as a major player in driving revenues. Given the fact that within two years more people will be surfing the web via mobile device rather than PC, is it any wonder that companies large and small see mobìle marketing as their ticket to easy revenues, especially since most people haven’t got a clue as to how to prevent their personal data from being mined.

Hey, I’ll bet there’s an app for that!

By Carl Weiss (c) 2012
Share
Category : Mobile, Small Business Help, Tech News

Keyword Fundamentals Will Determine Your Website Success

Wednesday, January 19, 2011 posted by admin 9:10 am

Choosing Keywords for your business websiteSuccessful sports teams have engrained in their heads the fundamentals of their sports. Business leaders and coaches alike who dwell on the fundamentals usually have the most successful outcomes. Failure is almost always rooted in a deviation from the fundamentals. So if your website is not delivering clients, perhaps you’re missing the fundamentals.

Part of the answer is no one actually taught you the fundamentals of website success. Most businesses understand the need for a website, few understand the fundamentals. Getting your website to deliver clients is an exercise in fundamentals. First and foremost is a back to basics, grass roots understandng of your market, website style.

Keyword research is the first thing every website owner should have done but most didn’t. With respect to your online business, keyword research equals market research. The coolest thing about being online is that you can absolutely KNOW your market, understand their interests and create an online business and marketing plan relative to your market and their needs.

There are probably hundreds of keyword research tools online that can help you do research. Our advice is to seek out an expert. Getting the data is one thing. Knowing what to do with it is quite a different thing.

Relative to keyword research, here’s what we can find via search engine tools: keywords and keyword phrases, search volumes, total web pages using those keywords, web pages optimized for those keywords, keywords in hypertext (called anchor text) linking to other sites and pages. We can even look at any specific website and determine what keywords they are at least trying to rank for. And of course, type the keyword phrase into a search box will list the top ten sites ranking for that term. The result of such a search is referred to as the SERPS or the Search Engine Results Pages.

The best keywords to use are ones that will generate reasonable traffic AND have very little competition. One of the parameters we seek in our keyword research is to determine the competitiveness of the keyword phrases. Google will tell us how many web pages are indexed for the search term. Just run a search and notice in the upper right of the results that Google will tell you how many pages are indexed with your search keywords. Without getting too technical here, Google and the other major search engines will also tell you how many web pages use those keywords in the page title, an indication that those pages specifically cover the topic of your search. Having keywords in the page title is one of the key ways to optimize a webpage for the keyword. Knowing how many pages are doing this gives you a better idea of how many pages are intentionally using the keywords you’re researching.

KEYWORD STRATEGY

Continue reading “Keyword Fundamentals Will Determine Your Website Success” »

Share
Category : Mobile, Search Engine Optimization Tips, SEO, Small Business Help

How has the digital revolution affected film, music and the wider entertainment industry? Has iTunes been a good thing or a bad thing for artists? And what should actors, musicians and entertainment professionals do to really utilize the web for their work?

Ariel “Ari” Emanuel addressed those questions and more in a 45-minute interview on stage at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco this week. Emanuel is the CEO of William Morris Endeavor Entertainment, one of the world’s largest talent agencies. He’s represented everyone from Conan O’Brien to Martin Scorsese. He’s also the inspiration and archetype for Ari Gold, the blunt and savvy Hollywood agent in HBO’s Entourage.

Emanuel addresses everything from Apple’s dominance of the music market to the nature of content on the web. At one point, the conversation gets heated when Tim O’Reilly pushes Emanuel’s buttons over piracy and fair pricing for content.

Check out the video below if you want to learn more:

Share
Category : Marketing, Mobile, Social Media, Tech News, Video, Website Design