viernes, 30 de mayo de 2008

Twitter Townhall?

May 30, 2008 — 03:01 PM PDT — by Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins — — 8 Comments

Matt Schlicht, a UStreamer and avid Twitter user, advanced a proposed solution to the PR issues the Twitter-folks are currently facing - do a live townhall. The live townhall concept is something that Digg started after they narrowly avoided a top user revolt following the deployment of some new features that weren’t recieved as well as they had hoped.

The obvious idea here is that Twitter and Digg are both services that are enormously popular amongst a particularly vocal subset of the tech user community. Any time either of these companies falters, even a little bit, because of the nature of their business those foibles are amplified far afield of the appropriate proportions (even if they are technically in the right, the negative press will still often outweigh the positive).

That’s why the townhall is such a great method to utilize. It’s free but for a little bit of your company’s time, and it allows you to connect with your users in a meaningful way, utilizing all aspects of verbal and non-verbal communication. It puts your company out in front of the potential troublespots, acts as a megaphone for not just the rough patches but the bright spots that you’d actually want to highlight. Most of all, it offers a means for explaining in depth all the intricacies of what’s going on behind the scenes that make us scratch our heads and go “Why is Twitter doing that?”

Matt has offered UStream as the platform of choice to broadcast this townhall, and I’d like to join in on his petition and offer Mashable as the official (or even unofficial) home of the liveblog coverage, much like what we do for Digg’s townhalls. We understand that managing a chatroom with that many interested users can be unruly, but when the hordes of Digg fans came for their townhall, we were able to provide a stable and slightly moderated communications arena for them to exist in for the duration.

So Twitter - my suggestion is you accept Matt’s proposal. He’s told me that he’s standing by, and that UStream will put their full efforts into supporting this endeavor and making it an effortless and effective means of communicating with your users on a mass scale.

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AdSense for RSS Feeds Set to Launch Next Week

May 30, 2008 — 12:09 PM PDT — by Adam Ostrow — — 7 Comments

Google-owned FeedBurner is set to launch AdSense for RSS next week according to a post on the company’s blog. Much like the AdSense for Web sites, AdSense for RSS will show contextual text advertising in publisher’s RSS feeds. In other words, if you’re reading a blog post about mobile phones in Google Reader, you might see ads for AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint.

How will AdSense for RSS work in conjunction with the ads Feedburner already sells and displays? The company explains:

“Publishers already in the FeedBurner Ad Network will continue to see premium CPM ads directly sold onto their content, but with the added bonus of contextually targeted ads that will fill up the remainder of their inventory. That means you get the best of both worlds: a dedicated Google sales force that knows how and why to sell onto your content, with the added revenue that full back-fill coverage provides.”

This is huge news for content publishers. As we know first-hand, monetization on RSS feeds to-date has been mediocre at best compared to Web-based advertising, and with an increasing amount of reading and conversation taking place off-site, that’s a brewing problem in the world of content publishing. It also means that the few remaining hold outs who only publish partial feeds (I’m looking at you CNET and The New York Times) may finally offer full feeds, since they can now be effectively monetized. On the other hand, for RSS consumers, it probably means the free ride is over.

While Feedburner has seemingly been neglected by Google since it was acquired, the strategy behind the deal is now coming full circle, as Google has effectively cornered the market on RSS monetization. They own the #1 (or #2 depending on who you ask) feed reader in Google Reader, the dominant feed management tool, and now what sounds like the most comprehensive way to monetize RSS, with Google’s huge base of advertisers already signed up (via AdWords) to participate.

Expect the full details of the AdSense for RSS program to be announced next week.

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LostZombies Aims to Create First Ever User-Generated Zombie Documentary

May 30, 2008 — 12:00 PM PDT — by Alana Taylor — — Add a Comment

Zombies are effing real. Or at least at LostZombies.com they are.

The new site is focused on creating the first ever community generated zombie documentary/mockumentary. Lost Zombies asks its members to upload proof of zombie existence through short video clips, audio, and photo submissions. Users can have profile pages, interact in the forum or chatroom, stay updated on “Most Active Outbreaks” and watch ZombieTV.

Lost Zombies hopes to compile all the proof of zombie existence that people submit from around the world, create a feature length documentary film, and ultimately “…educate the world’s population of the reality of zombies and the potential, if not imminent, zombie apocalypse.”

Although we don’t expect Mashable readers to ever spend time at LostZombies.com, in the case of a zombie apocalypse, don’t say we didn’t warn you.



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Ask Celebrities, Politicians and Athletes Questions with ZotFish

May 30, 2008 — 11:59 AM PDT — by Alana Taylor — — 6 Comments

Will Steve Jobs ever write a book? It’s an interesting question that you can ask your friends, but what if you had the chance to ask the man himself?

ZotFish, a free site that just launched this month, allows anyone to ask a question to over 400 celebrities, politicians, artists, athletes, authors, and more. In other words, it’s a virtual press conference where everybody can participate.

The forum-style setup lets the general public communicate with public figures by submitting questions and then voting on the questions they want answered most. The clever folks at ZotFish also took into consideration the fact that a conversation works both ways and added the option of letting public figures ask questions and get their own feedback from the public.

Questions are sorted by name, category and votes, and ZotFish provides users with profile pages that track their activities.



In many ways the submission, voting, and commenting style of ZotFish strikingly resembles Digg. The number of votes pushes popular questions to the front page, and once a public figure answers the question, everything is cleared and reset so that users can submit fresh votes and comments on how useful the answer was.

There are sites like Avanoo and 10Questions that attempt to provide the same service as ZotFish, but none of the question-and-answer sites that exist seek the participation of celebrities, politicians, and other famous people so actively.

It has never been easy for the public to communicate with people who are important in society and have high social status. And unless you are Wine Library TV’s Gary Vaynerchuk or hyper-active tech blogger, Robert Scoble, it’s even less likely for busy public figures to be able to respond to inquiries.

Sure, there will be too many questions for these public figures to answer and their lives aren’t going to be any less hectic, but through the voting system they will be able to jump right in and answer the top 3 most popular questions. Not only does it sound fast and easy, but as long as there’s participation, like Digg, there’s no reason why it shouldn’t work.

And, of course, if Steve Jobs ever wants to ask the public what they think of his new black turtleneck, ZotFish will be waiting.

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TrainHero: Diet & Exercise 2.0 [The Startup Review]

May 30, 2008 — 09:13 AM PDT — by Alana Taylor — — 6 Comments

Editor’s Note: If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion in “The Startup Review” series, please see the details here.

STARTUP DETAILS:

Company Name: TrainHero

20-word Description: Track your workouts in a social gathering that promotes and motivates.

CEO’s 100-word Pitch: TrainHero is a one of a kind site whose purpose it to help those looking to improve their health. Accurately track your fitness and nutrition intakes in a social community that helps motivate you towards your goals. Included is a complete workout journal, gym locater, fitness videos, diet database, community forum, and tons more!

Mashable’s Take: From the get-go, TrainHero grabs our attention because it tackles the problem that most everyone has — remembering to exercise and eat healthy. TrainHero makes it easy to record daily workouts, join fitness groups, and search through a long list of diets. The site offers to help anyone lose weight, gain weight, or maintain their current state of fitness by creating a social network of users who are attempting to achieve the same goals.

Some of the notable features that the TrainHero site has include a gym search tab that locates gyms in your area, a recipe search that finds hundreds of different meals, and a list of videos about cooking and exercising.

TrainHero works for those who are looking to get in shape. In other words, everyone can use it. However, on a larger scale, it’s hard to see what TrainHero offers that hundreds of other health and fitness sites don’t. PEERtrainer, eDiets, and MyFitBuddy all aim to connect users in a social networking community of exercisers, nutritionists and trainers.

The layout of the TrainHero site is slightly amateur with most of its videos, like this cheesy 80s aerobics video, coming straight from YouTube. There aren’t many users on the site yet which makes the group feature less helpful, and the limited capabilities in terms of connecting with other users is reminiscent of the early Hi5 blueprint.

On the whole, TrainHero looks promising in terms of social media innovation but has yet to prove that it can compete with the overwhelming amount of well-known and established rivals.

Sponsored By: Sun Startup Essentials

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Lieberman and bin Laden Get It; Why Doesn’t YouTube?

May 30, 2008 — 02:57 AM PDT — by Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins — — 32 Comments

Last Monday, I wrote an editorial piece supporting Senator Joe Lieberman in his plea to Google to show some restraint and start voluntarily censoring and pulling down videos by those known to post terrorist content and terrorist propaganda. Many of you in the comments left on the editorial piece were in agreement with me, as I had demonstrated with a list of contradictory policy moves by the YouTube team, that Google’s YouTube team has no discernible guiding ethics when they enforce censorship or their own terms of service. Moreover, YouTube and Google remain clueless as to the difference between free expression, and evil and criminal behavior being effectively marketed using Silicon Valley’s own social media methodologies.

Some of you in the comments, however, took the side of a number of blogs and news organizations in defending the terrorists, saying that they had a right to free speech. I’ve been taking names, doing some deep thinking, and doing some first hand research of my own. I’ve been pondering the best way to present all this information to you, the readers, in a way that shows you exactly what’s going on and why this isn’t one of those issues you should write off. So bear with me, as I walk you through this whole debacle in laborious detail.

The Hypocrisy List
I published last week a list of things that Google’s YouTube has let slide, and things that they choose to censor. Here’s the same list, updated (items with updated status bolded):

Michelle Malkin: Censored for promoting hate speech, when she created a music montage showing victims of Muslim terrorist attacks in response to the Muhammed riots.
BumFights: Uncensored. Videos of actual homeless folks paid in sandwiches for beating the crap out of one another.
Handsome Hong Kong Guy Censored for showing videos of clothed local females with derogatory towards women music in the background.
This Pornography Advertisement Uncensored. It doesn’t show actual full nudity or sex acts, but you definitely get the idea.
A Breast-Feeding Mother Censored over obscenity claims.
This Strip Tease Censored. A small area over the genitals remains covered for the duration of the minute and a half long strip tease. This video was removed the day after our editorial went live on the site. There are still hundreds more like it on the site, however.
An Egyptian Fellow Censored (then uncensored) for showing video evidence of local police brutality.
This GTA IV Ad Uncensored, despite depicting a police officer firing a gun into a crowd of civilians.

Not much has changed. YouTube still plays host to all sorts of depraved depictions of sex and violence, while still having a record for censoring important journalism, innocent nudity, free speech responses to terrorists and just plain silly videos with sillier music playing.

(more…)

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Thanks to Our Sponsors

May 30, 2008 — 02:38 AM PDT — by Tamar Weinberg — — Add a Comment

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Twitter Closes $15 Million Funding Round

May 30, 2008 — 12:00 AM PDT — by Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins — — 4 Comments

Twitter, apparently, has closed it’s much rumored $15 million funding round. That’s the news being reported by PaidContent today (a bit of news that seems to have been lost in the shuffle today). The news came out this morning, and is some positive news that couldn’t come at a better time for the somewhat beleaguered (at least in the blogosphere) status microblogging company.

Twitter hasn’t had a solid week in which all the features were functional or the service itself had consistent uptime in recent memory. Add onto that the PR faux pax with Pownce’s community director being called the C-Word (not to mention the very public separation with LastPodcast blogger Frederic), and it’s just not been a good few weeks.

Who is making it all seem worthwhile for the Twitterpeople? Spark Capital with Union Square are the two PaidContent is confirming through their unnamed sources.

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Shel vs. Shel: A Throwaway Joke Comes of Age

May 29, 2008 — 09:32 PM PDT — by Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins — — 3 Comments

If you’ve been following the work of ‘Shel Israel’ (the one at ShelIsrael.com), you no doubt have been suitably entertained, as each episode is filled with tons of Web 2.0 inside jokes, primarily at the expense of Global Neighborhood’s Shel Israel, but also at the expense of any number of Web 2.0 personalities that happen to spring to Loren Feldman’s mind at the time of the interview.

Generally the tone of a Shel Israel puppet video exaggerates all the qualities of the actual Shel Israel and goes straight for the laughs. As Loren continues to produce them, to prevent the gag from wearing thin I imagine, he’s starting to introduce actual meat to the program and asking questions provoking serious and informative answers. It’s interesting to see what’s considered to be actual valuable content (by the standards of us geeks who are the target market for the actual Global Neighborhoods program by FastCompany) start to emerge from this unusual interview style.

It’s with that preface I bring to you an interesting and entertaining interview by ‘Shel Israel’ of Jason Calacanis, with the subject matter being Mahalo.com.

A Bit on Mahalo
In the video, Jason talks a bit about the origins of where the name Mahalo comes from (of course, it’s Hawaiian, but it’s geared towards the general public, as opposed to 20.com, the original title for the service which ended up sounding too techy).

Generally, though, Mahalo strategy is shaping up to be a mash-up of Google and Wikipedia, and as Jason says in the video, is essentially what most folks use in their day to day life when they come to the internet for information. Most folks don’t go past the first couple pages of results. Since Wikipedia is the first entry on most searches, they end up there and typically only read the first part of the article and scan for facts.

Rather than end up trying to duplicate all that information or functionality, the strategy, as Jason comes around to saying, is to take the most used parts of both sources and package it within the Mahalo experience, making Mahalo what he calls a research engine (essentially what I was driving at last year when I came to the realization that Mahalo was deserving of a second look):

To clarify (and extrapolate a bit) on what I think that goal is: to be an evolving directory ala DMOZ or Wikipedia; one that’s less rife with corruption and a bit more friendly to commercial interests. It certainly can never replace Google, but for me, when certain types of deeper niche-specific research is required, it is an excellent jumping off point. It certainly has exceeded my expectations.

The Meta Discussion Here
Aside from the interesting points Mahalo, a point being made clear not just by Jason’s elucidations, but by how the general usage of Mahalo is shaping up to be for folks that I talk to, there’s another interesting point being made by Loren Feldman with the continued production of the Shel Israel puppet shows.

Interviews are a hard thing to do in an innovative way. The most innovative approach in the last ten years or so has been the rise in the raw or naked conversation (probably talked about the most by Shel Israel and Robert Scoble), but performed avidly by folks like Rob Walch with his Podcast411 show, or even in Old Media shows like Inside the Actors Studio. Even the Mashable Conversations show takes on this format. There are certain advantages and appeals to the format like lowered production time and the ability to really explore the meat of the subject matter in a way that the most hardcore of fans for that subject can enjoy.

The problem is, as Loren has talked about again and again, is that folks not passionately interested in the subject will get bored very quickly. He’s been very vocally opposed for sometime to the style, but before inspiration struck, hadn’t put his money where his mouth is in coming up with a viable alternative.

This method of interview is interesting, entertaining and informative. It’s something to keep your eye on, particularly if you’re a rich media content producer, as an emerging style and trend in digital video. What started out as a joke is turning out to beat the original at his own game.

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BizAg: Multi-Site Business-for-Sale Search [The Startup Review]

May 29, 2008 — 02:09 PM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 4 Comments

Editor’s Note: If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion in “The Startup Review” series, please see the details here.

STARTUP DETAILS:

Company Name: BizAg

20-word Description: Search businesses for sale from multiple websites

CEO’s 100-word Pitch: BizAg aggregates business for sale listings from multiple classifieds sites into a single comprehensive search solution. We are a vertical search engine of businesses for sale. Searching businesses for sale is inefficient and difficult. Listings are everywhere, making it hard to compare listings and make informed decisions. BizAg improves that experience by offering the largest database of business for sale listings. Advanced search tools and market information enables buyers to find their perfect business.

Mashable’s Take: Until this week, BizAg was kept under a private beta lock, which presumably kept its user numbers very low, but now that it is publicly accessible, it may not be too much to imagine it as a relatively popular front end for its market.

There are of course numerous business-for-sale listing services on the Web. BizBuySell is a biggie. BizQuest is another prominent option. Yet most individuals who browse those sites are likely to use one engine to great degree, and others with significantly less regularity. (One might draw an analogy to such habits as one does the usage patterns for broader search tools like Google Search or Yahoo Search or Microsoft Live Search.)

Therefore, BizAg works to help seekers of business for sale to expand their options. It’s job is to search multiple sources for listings of businesses advertised for sale. As it finds them, it presents them; with results that can be organized by age (of advert), asking price, location, and of course, business name. BizAg also presents users with a data grid atop main section of the page to display business trends and statistics. Things like average asking price, average cashflow, average revenue, and cashflow and revenue multipliers are shown within the box, as are popular states for businesses are displayed, though that selection appears to be a static one and not amenable to keyword specification.

There’s no question that BizAg is an eminently simple service. It seems as lightweight as a search engine can be. And that’s fine by us. After all, what more do you need? You want something to get you from A to B (or in business search, “A to Z”) as quickly as possible. In that capacity, BizAg appears to deliver. Perhaps it could expand its reach to more listing sources. Variety and thoroughness are key in the search arena. For a startup nearly fresh out the gate, however, BizAg has logically covered the largest bases first. It should now work to delve deeper - into harder-to-reach places, so to speak. That is where it will prove its true mettle.

Sponsored By: Sun Startup Essentials

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Revision3 CEO Speaks DoS, Media Defender, And The FBI

May 29, 2008 — 12:47 PM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 4 Comments

As many Web video fans may have recognized, Revision3, the production company responsible for shows like Diggnation, PixelPerfect, Systm, Tekzilla, and popSiren, wasn’t itself this past Memorial Day weekend. It hit a rough patch. Or, to be more precise, the rough patch hit Revision3. And not so much a rough “patch” per se, but rather whopper of an attack.

And in case you’re curious as to what terrible spell caused the downfall of numerous in-house access, including the public-facing site, RSS server, and even the corporate email system, Revision3 CEO Jim Louderback today offered a very detailed, well-rounded explanation. The gist of his voluminous blog post: It’s all Media Defender’s fault.

Indeed, the group oft referred by critics to be naught but an abusive purveyor of digital waste - it’s speciality is Denial of Service attacks, or DoS for short - and which is reported to have been under the occasionally employ of both the RIAA and MPAA, as well as individual media companies among the likes of Sony and Universal Music, was discovered as the sole producer of a torrent of SYN packets sent the way of Revision3.

Evidently, some tech folks at Revision3 recognized that there was “some unauthorized use of (its) tracking server” (one culprit of such unsavory activity just so happened to be Media Defender), took steps to stop the unwarranted activity, and subsequently triggered Media Defender’s personal botnet to initiate a massive stream of SYN packets in an attempt to reconnect to Revision3’s servers. So, an unfortunately brutal DoS onslaught with non-malevolent intentions.

Naturally, Louderback maintains a measure of reserved anger in his public response to Media Defender’s attack. As the CEO of a venture funded video production outfit, Louderback wouldn’t be doing his company any favors by speaking in entirely explicit fashion. Even so, one can clearly grasp that Media Defender was in the wrong last weekend and in the wrong some time before then, when it pilfered server power from Revision3 to suit its purposes as the action man behind the record and movie industries’ copyright protection efforts. Louderback of course doesn’t do what many might wish him to, which is to speak of the potential for a lawsuit to claim financial restitution for 3-4 days of lost business.

But in time, any details to that effect will likely surface sometime in the near future. As with all things controversial and Web-related, an issue of this sort and this high of a profile sits upon a porous foundation, through which leaks are bound to occur. Perhaps a courtroom session is called for? Perhaps a settlement may emerge from this ill-begotten encounter. At the moment, all that the public is being told is the FBI is “looking into the matter.” Whatever the end result, this looks like another big hit (or miss, depending on how one prefers to see it) for Media Defender and its parent company, Artists Direct, that went very badly for the sender. And justly so, I say.

jueves, 29 de mayo de 2008


BizAg: Multi-Site Business-for-Sale Search [The Startup Review]

May 29, 2008 — 02:09 PM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 2 Comments

Editor’s Note: If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion in “The Startup Review” series, please see the details here.

STARTUP DETAILS:

Company Name: BizAg

20-word Description: Search businesses for sale from multiple websites

CEO’s 100-word Pitch: BizAg aggregates business for sale listings from multiple classifieds sites into a single comprehensive search solution. We are a vertical search engine of businesses for sale. Searching businesses for sale is inefficient and difficult. Listings are everywhere, making it hard to compare listings and make informed decisions. BizAg improves that experience by offering the largest database of business for sale listings. Advanced search tools and market information enables buyers to find their perfect business.

Mashable’s Take: Until this week, BizAg was kept under a private beta lock, which presumably kept its user numbers very low, but now that it is publicly accessible, it may not be too much to imagine it as a relatively popular front end for its market.

There are of course numerous business-for-sale listing services on the Web. BizBuySell is a biggie. BizQuest is another prominent option. Yet most individuals who browse those sites are likely to use one engine to great degree, and others with significantly less regularity. (One might draw an analogy to such habits as one does the usage patterns for broader search tools like Google Search or Yahoo Search or Microsoft Live Search.)

Therefore, BizAg works to help seekers of business for sale to expand their options. It’s job is to search multiple sources for listings of businesses advertised for sale. As it finds them, it presents them; with results that can be organized by age (of advert), asking price, location, and of course, business name. BizAg also presents users with a data grid atop main section of the page to display business trends and statistics. Things like average asking price, average cashflow, average revenue, and cashflow and revenue multipliers are shown within the box, as are popular states for businesses are displayed, though that selection appears to be a static one and not amenable to keyword specification.

There’s no question that BizAg is an eminently simple service. It seems as lightweight as a search engine can be. And that’s fine by us. After all, what more do you need? You want something to get you from A to B (or in business search, “A to Z”) as quickly as possible. In that capacity, BizAg appears to deliver. Perhaps it could expand its reach to more listing sources. Variety and thoroughness are key in the search arena. For a startup nearly fresh out the gate, however, BizAg has logically covered the largest bases first. It should now work to delve deeper - into harder-to-reach places, so to speak. That is where it will prove its true mettle.

Sponsored By: Sun Startup Essentials

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Revision3 CEO Speaks DoS, Media Defender, And The FBI

May 29, 2008 — 12:47 PM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 1 Comment

As many Web video fans may have recognized, Revision3, the production company responsible for shows like Diggnation, PixelPerfect, Systm, Tekzilla, and popSiren, wasn’t itself this past Memorial Day weekend. It hit a rough patch. Or, to be more precise, the rough patch hit Revision3. And not so much a rough “patch” per se, but rather whopper of an attack.

And in case you’re curious as to what terrible spell caused the downfall of numerous in-house access, including the public-facing site, RSS server, and even the corporate email system, Revision3 CEO Jim Louderback today offered a very detailed, well-rounded explanation. The gist of his voluminous blog post: It’s all Media Defender’s fault.

Indeed, the group oft referred by critics to be naught but an abusive purveyor of digital waste - it’s speciality is Denial of Service attacks, or DoS for short - and which is reported to have been under the occasionally employ of both the RIAA and MPAA, as well as individual media companies among the likes of Sony and Universal Music, was discovered as the sole producer of a torrent of SYN packets sent the way of Revision3.

Evidently, some tech folks at Revision3 recognized that there was “some unauthorized use of (its) tracking server” (one culprit of such unsavory activity just so happened to be Media Defender), took steps to stop the unwarranted activity, and subsequently triggered Media Defender’s personal botnet to initiate a massive stream of SYN packets in an attempt to reconnect to Revision3’s servers. So, an unfortunately brutal DoS onslaught with non-malevolent intentions.

Naturally, Louderback maintains a measure of reserved anger in his public response to Media Defender’s attack. As the CEO of a venture funded video production outfit, Louderback wouldn’t be doing his company any favors by speaking in entirely explicit fashion. Even so, one can clearly grasp that Media Defender was in the wrong last weekend and in the wrong some time before then, when it pilfered server power from Revision3 to suit its purposes as the action man behind the record and movie industries’ copyright protection efforts. Louderback of course doesn’t do what many might wish him to, which is to speak of the potential for a lawsuit to claim financial restitution for 3-4 days of lost business.

But in time, any details to that effect will likely surface sometime in the near future. As with all things controversial and Web-related, an issue of this sort and this high of a profile sits upon a porous foundation, through which leaks are bound to occur. Perhaps a courtroom session is called for? Perhaps a settlement may emerge from this ill-begotten encounter. At the moment, all that the public is being told is the FBI is “looking into the matter.” Whatever the end result, this looks like another big hit (or miss, depending on how one prefers to see it) for Media Defender and its parent company, Artists Direct, that went very badly for the sender. And justly so, I say.

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Matt Mullenweg Loves His Kindle [podcast]

May 29, 2008 — 12:00 PM PDT — by Mark 'Rizzn' Hopkins — — 3 Comments

matt-mullenweg1.png
What do you do if you have a chunk of time slotted to hang out and talk with the creator of WordPress and CEO of Automattic? You do what everyone else does in the Web 2.0 world - you talk about Twitter!

This Friday past, Matt took some time out to hang out on Mashable Conversations to chat with me and you guys, not because he had anything to pitch me, but because he’s a genuinely nice guy who when he says offhandedly at a WordCamp that he wouldn’t mind coming on your podcast at some point, gladly obliges.

Given that we had no particular agenda of topics to talk about, we chatted briefly about what’s in store for the next version of WordPress (here’s a hint - WordPress is going to be tackling video in their next version, and from the sounds of it will be an ambitious undertaking), and then I went down the laundry list of hot topics in the blogosphere at the moment.

I didn’t bring up Twitter just for the sake of talking about it - a while back, Matt announced the release of a special theme for WordPress called Prolouge, which we covered here at Mashable. The idea behind the release was to provide small to mid-sized teams a way to have Twitter functionality without putting the company business out there for the world to see. It’s a great idea that they not only gave to the world, but use themselves internally at Automattic.

In the release blog, though, Matt had made an interesting statement about the theme:

Some folks have suggested that using WordPress, Prologue, and RSS you could create a pretty effective distributed version of Twitter. This isn’t something we’re personally interested in, but we’ve made the theme available as open source under the GPL so if you want to hack around it yourself you’re welcome to.

I tried to pin down with him what he thought the feasibility of this plan was, and the likelyhood of it coming about given the chronic downtime Twitter has been experiencing lately.

The biggest problem that Twitter has experienced, with regard to it being down all the time, is generally regarded as it’s scalability problem. This is an area that Matt could speak to with some authority, as WordPress has climbed the various Mt. Everests in terms of high usage situations, and generally weathered all the adventure without a hitch.

Aside from the Twitter topic, we also talked about the future of blog content, RSS, comment fragmentation, and how much he loves his Kindle (in which I took the opportunity to shamelessly appeal to Jeff Bezos, Mashable Conversations Listener, to send me a review unit).

It’s definitely a riveting conversation top to bottom. Whether you’re a WordPress user or just a user of the Web, the conversation is definitely interesting.

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Veronica Belmont’s Top 10 Up-and-Coming Web Applications

May 29, 2008 — 10:47 AM PDT — by Adam Ostrow — — 10 Comments

In the world of Web celebrity, few have become as well-known in the past year as Veronica Belmont, who first gained acclaim as host of CNet’s Buzz Out Loud, then moved onto Jason Calacanis’ Mahalo Daily, and most recently took the reigns at Revision3’s Tekzilla Show. Along the way, she even interviewed our own resident Web celeb, Pete Cashmore, at MashMeet LA (embedded below).

Now comes our chance to interview Veronica, as we debut our new “Celebrity Top 10 Series,” where we’ll be asking both the Internet and otherwise famous to compile lists of their tech-related favorites. To kick things off, we’ve asked Veronica to tell us her favorite 10 up-and-coming web applications, a topic near and dear to our hearts at Mashable.

Without further ado, here’s Veronica’s Top 10 Up-and-Coming Web Applications:

1. Brightkite

With Dodgeball.com going the way of the dodo, Brightkite has stepped in as the new location-based social network. I like the ability to post notes and images to places that I’ve visited, and it seems like they’re poised for more widespread adoption than Dodgeball was (might have something to do with Google basically closeting Dodgeball after purchasing them).

2. Dropbox

Dropbox will be the answer for anyone who needs to share files and documents with others, or to sync files between computers. As a former .Mac user, I prefer Dropbox because of it’s slick web interface.

3. Pownce

People often wonder why there needs to be another microblogging service, but I think Pownce is much more than that. Being able to comment directly within a post helps to foster better conversations, and the file and link sharing is really convenient.

4. Remember The Milk

I haven’t quite figured out how to work RTM into my everyday life, but it shows a lot of promise. If you have a lot of tasks that need to get done, RTM helps you organize and stay on target with RSS feeds and iCal reminders.

5. Friendfeed

Friendfeed is yet another way to aggregate content from all of your various social networks, and clue your friends into what you’ve been checking out lately. It seems to be the main choice for the Twitter refugees during downtime, as you can also make standalone comments and replies to posts.

6. Rupture

The new brainchild of Napster founder Shawn Fanning, Rupture is a gaming social network that will pull info and track the achievements on all your games, and from all platforms. From Halo 3 to World of Warcraft, you’ll be able to see what your friends are up to (and how much you pwn them in all your games).

7. Trulia

Apparently these are good times for buying a new home, and Trulia is a fantastic way to browse listings in your area. Each listing gives you information about the home, including price, the year it was built, prior sale history, photos, and much more. Way better than the guessing game on Craigslist.

8. Downforeveryoneorjustme.com

The name of the site speaks for itself. Find out if your favorite website is really down for the count, or if it’s a problem on your end.

9. Qik

This service gives you the ability to live-stream video from your Nokia N95, and it will also automatically post a notice to Twitter if you want to receive live chat comments. Yes, it only works on the N95 now, but they’re working on supporting new phones soon. It may seem superfluous, until you get streams like this one of the Mars rover landing that might not have been available otherwise!

10. Seesmic

A network based around video is nothing new, but Seesmic is really reaching out of build video conversations with their members. They’ve been likened to the Twitter of video, and they recently acquired the app Twhirl. It’s not as easy, at least for me, to come up with an interesting video clip as opposed to 140 characters of text, but I think they’ve got some cool stuff lined up for the future.



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Trulia Launches Snapshot Visual Search Tool

May 29, 2008 — 10:12 AM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 8 Comments

Trulia, a real estate search site which stands among the best in the business and which offers users detailed discovery of properties for sale as well as quite detailed analysis of real estate markets, has launched a new utility called Snapshot, powered by Microsoft Virtual Earth, that overlays housing data atop an interactive map that is nothing short of a visual treat. Once the user specifies a city or town to view, all basic browsing on Snapshot is done via images. The user can grab any area of the map to move it about, just as you would Virtual Earth in its primary setting.

As you can see, the theme is rich with gray and black hues, with Trulia’s trademark green providing accents for navigation functions and quick views of particular properties. If you opt to see more extensive details of a location, you’re whisked to its primary page on Trulia, where, if the property happens to fall under the watchful road-going eye of the Google Street View van, you can also take a peek at the front door and the surrounding neighborhood.

Trulia surely recognizes that Snapshot is heavy on eye candy and low on substance, but the new front-end seems well integrated enough into main database of the website to prove useful for those who wish to take a bird’s-eye view to home shopping. If you feel that basic, linear search results aren’t quite what they used to be, and you’re in the market for a new roof - or just curious - Snapshot is certainly offers a nice fresh feel to Trulia’s already well-regarded search engine.

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Video: Live from Tokyo Demo. Utagoe is RSS, Chat and Streaming

May 29, 2008 — 09:50 AM PDT — by Kristen Nicole — — 1 Comment

After meeting with Japanese government entity METI (the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry) while in Tokyo this week, it was nice to meet some of the startups that are working on various projects in Japan. There is one in particular that also happens to be launching tonight, called utagoe.

A new service from the makers of Channel.is, utagoe is an RSS video service that combines television and other online programming with live video chat and live video streaming. Utagoe is an all-encompassing tool that looks to combine the majority of your personal video consumption tools in one place. The videos themselves are played on a customizable screen, where you determine the order and size of the video content that plays here.

As utagoe can be used for live video chat, there’s also an option to use this service for live video conferencing as well. Utagoe grew from the necessity of Channel.is’ user-generated broadcasting data to have a web app that allowed them to share their video experiences in a social manner. In terms of aggregating video for multiple purposes, however, Utagoe is looking to redefine video RSS readers, to a certain extent.


Utagoe Demo from Kristen Nicole on Vimeo.

While the underlying concepts of Utagoe seem to touch on existing services like Seesmic and Splashcast, the centralized multimedia approach that Utagoe is after also reminds me of Jacked, which provides video content alongside interactive forms of data. It seems like a far stretch to compare Utagoe with Jacked, especially as Jacked is a pretty specific use case scenario for viewing sports videos, but the potential for Utagoe to become an individualized video news room is interesting to think about.

In order to become more practical, however, Utagoe will likely need more integration with other apps and types of RSS content. Moving a step further in this direction, Utagoe’s next release will be an iPhone version of its service.

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Create Rounded Corners For Images with RoundPic

May 29, 2008 — 09:43 AM PDT — by Alana Taylor — — 7 Comments

RoundPic is exactly what the name suggests: an image editing site where simple, square photos can be uploaded and smoothed out to create sleek, rounded corners.

The service is almost too easy. You simply upload your picture or enter the URL of the image, and click “Round It!” You can then save your new pic or customize it further by changing the size, background color, and how round the corners are. Once it’s complete, just click download and you’re good to go.

RoundPic is currently working on adding new sizes for rounding, borders, and featuring the option to save as html, png, gif, or bmp (currently you can only save pictures as png).

The site is so plain that it reminds me of old-school Geocities or Angelfire websites, but for those of us who blog or work with images all day and don’t have time to be exploring complicated photo-editing tools, RoundPic is the obvious solution. Finally, Photoshop for Lazies.

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11 Web Applications to Check Out as Twiistup Finalists Revealed

May 29, 2008 — 09:34 AM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 1 Comment

Twiistup 4, an event to be held on July 17, 2008 in Santa Monica, California, and of which Mashable is a media sponsor (Pete will be one of the judges), has announced its list of 11 startup finalists to be offered stage time to demo their products and services.

Ordinarily, Twiistup provides a venue for 10 chosen companies, but due to greater-than-expected interest, one more slot has been added to this year’s lineup. The 11 companies to be presented this summer are:

Based in South Pasadena, CA, Big Stage is a media company whose breakthrough technology allows users to easily create and integrate a life-like 3D avatar of themselves into everything from famous movie scenes, TV shows and video games, to music videos, short video clips, virtual worlds, still images, user-generated content, instant messages, emails, social networks and more - instantly.

Based in San Jose, CA, BookRenter is the first online book rental service. BookRenter.com replaces traditional bookstore sales with online book rentals for students at schools throughout the nation.

Based in Venice, CA, Compulsion is a simple, easy to use tool that makes video clickable. The clicks become links that turn the video into an entire interactive universe of an individual’s design. Users can offer or sell those links for click and shop, gossip, trivia, news, music, more video, or anything imaginable.

Based in Las Angeles, CA, The LOUD3R Enthusiast Network is made up of in-depth, topic-oriented Web sites that are designed for the enthusiast and the curious who want to quickly find the best, richest content about a specific topic.

Based in Austin, TX, Minggl is a social interaction manager. Mashable covered this pick before. The Minggl toolbar makes it easy to manage information, communication and navigation across social networks.

Based in Los Angeles, CA, Musicshake, Inc is the world’s first online UGM (User Generated Music) creation service that provides music composing solutions aimed at the general public (a.k.a. music dummies) without previous musical knowledge or expertise.

Based in San Jose, CA, Phonevite, a startup we at Mashable mentioned several months ago, is the new, fun and simple way to send announcements and reminders over the phone, in the user’s own voice.

Based in Los Angeles, CA, Seethroo is a behavioral-targeting technology designed for social networks that specializes in user-generated content.

Based in Vancouver, BC, Strutta, a startup Mashable covered just last month, brings players together from around the world in the spirit of true competition, from grassroots scrappers to all star pros.

Based in Santa Monica, CA, Tools To Life is the world’s first free online self-help social network with real programs and community-driven support networks.

Based in Los Angeles, CA, Twiddla is a free, real-time online collaboration tool that offers simplicity and accessibility. It doesn’t require plug-ins, installs or downloads, and users don’t have to work around complex firewalls or advanced scheduling.

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Live from Tokyo: What the Japanese Government Really Wants for Web Biz

May 29, 2008 — 08:25 AM PDT — by Kristen Nicole — — 5 Comments

You may have noticed my Twitter stream chronicling the important aspects of my Tokyo trip (organized by Lunarr) thus far, like heated toilet seats. But today I got a chance to meet with several companies (mostly startups) that are working to affect change in online Japanese culture. The first meeting was with The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI), which is a branch of the government that works on various policies related to business and commerce.

How does that relate to the online world? For one, the way in which METI is working on implementing governmental structures for IT software, human resources and open source projects. It’s backwards, when compared to what we do in the U.S. METI has a distinct focus on the creative process for promoting innovation, which will in turn provide a system that inherently recognizes the thought leaders that can drive ideas and implementation of a particular solution.

This process represents a mindful consideration of the way in which the end result can be achieved in a beneficial manner towards consumers, legality, and commerce.

Will this plan work?

Government intervention doesn’t typically occur in the early stages of idea implementation for IT-related solutions in the states; the government usually waits until there’s a mess to clean up. So in attempting to spur innovation through programs like open source initiatives and the Genius Programmer or Super Creators groups that one of our hosts Hisashi Katsuya, Venture Development Executive, Japan Representative, at IBM’s Venture Capital Group, is helping to run, there’s a government program here in Japan that is really trying to push the creativity end of innovation.

Signal vs. Noise vs. Really Smart People

When we think of open source programs, there’s a perspective one could take in terms of an inherent drive towards innovation versus the perspective that open source merely enables more noise. Picking up on the signal from the noise could very well be the good idea in the lot of many bad ideas, but isn’t always a direct way in which innovation is achieved.

Nevertheless, it’s an important aspect of the innovative process, as it extends tools to a broader set of people. Tie this in with other things METI is doing, such as working with human resource departments and actively seeking out singular thought leaders is a multi-faceted approach to driving innovation. To given an example, METI is looking to work with larger corporations like Nissan and Toyota to identify problems, work with them (using the aforementioned initiatives) in order to solve problems, and have a modeled set of standards that can be spread throughout the rest of the business world.

The government gets a firsthand look at the types of IT development that is going on within the private sector, and has an easier way in which to establish standards for legalistic purposes when the time comes.

The Future Looks So Sci-Fi

One way in which METI is hoping to use its influence for streamlining businesses is to tie package delivery services with mobile phones–why have a package delivered to your home or office when you can have it delivered to wherever you are, based on mobile access and tracking communications with the delivery service?

That may seem a little off kilter, but the representatives at METI gave some additional examples of theoretical projects that could be of interest, such as a unique ID system that creates a web/mobile component for anything and everything for which you’d like to assign a unique ID. This could be for objects like tables, advertisements, offline groups or meetings, restaurants, and more. This data could be used for personalized mobile, interactive browsing that creates a map of recommended places to shop and eat, according to your preferences.

A unique ID given to an offline meeting could be married with photos and audio and video recordings from the meeting, along with a calendar, group email, geo-location tagging, basic blogging updates and team task management. It all sounds a bit sci-fi, and there are plenty of logistic issues that arise from tossing around such ideas, but it was interesting to hear such theoretical applications discussed by a government entity. Of course, one of the largest benefits of METI being involved on such a low level (as far as development goes) is that it’s possibly able to better establish standards from a legal standpoint, and across companies that may otherwise not communicate with each other in an early stage.

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iTunes UK To Soon Launch Movie Sales And Rentals

May 29, 2008 — 08:01 AM PDT — by Paul Glazowski — — 3 Comments

While US-based customers of the iTunes Store have been privileged to purchase and download video content in the form of television programs and feature films, consumers in the UK have had to make do with TV offerings only. Soon, however, Apple will be announcing its start of sales of movie titles pulled from the catalogues of four studios - Disney Pictures, Paramount, 20th Century Fox, and Warner Bros. - which will purportedly be priced similar to those affixed to physical DVD copies of new and archival releases. It has also been reported that Apple will simultaneously make available the option to rent movies.

According to Dan Sabbagh of The Times of London, though prices for DVDs generally fall somewhere within the range of £6 to £25, the average cost for movies sold through Amazon and Play.com, roughly £12.99, is “an indication of the potential pricing” for movies sales within the UK iTunes Store. Of course, as with movie studios’ desires to maintain vibrant DVD sales within the US, they will be naturally price purchase-to-own movie sales so as not to undercut their DVD businesses, which presently comprise a significant share of annual revenue.

No word yet as to whether Apple has secured a movie release schedule in line with that of the studios’ DVD calendars for the UK market, as it did in the US earlier this year. Also, Sony Pictures and Universal Studios are both said to be absent from the list of initial partners for the coming launch. A number of studios smaller than the industry’s largest, like Lions Gate and MGM, meanwhile, have purportedly joined the effort along with the first four major contributors.

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Postica Offers Virtual Sticky Notes with File Sharing

May 29, 2008 — 07:59 AM PDT — by Alana Taylor — — 8 Comments

If you’re the person who works at a desk with hundreds of hot pink and yellow Post-It notes pasted all around your computer, then it might be time for you to upgrade to Postica. It’s a new application that creates virtual sticky notes that can be shared with friends.

Postica provides a blank space where notes can be dragged around and saves their location so that it looks the same on any computer. It’s fairly simple to attach a file, change the color of a note, and e-mail it to another user.

Postica, like the wiki-style app Protonotes, might be useful for those of you who enjoy using Post-Its 2.0 and have been wanting to share your desktop notes with your friends. It might even save time for setting aside files instead of e-mailing them to yourself.

But if you already use the hundreds of “reminder” and “file-sharing” apps, software, and sites that exist, Postica probably won’t phase you in the least.