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What is Quora?

Quorabig

According to Wikipedia Quora is an online knowledge market, founded in June 2009, launched in private beta in December 2009, and made available to the public on June 21, 2010. Quora aggregates questions and answers to many topics and allows users to collaborate on them.

Quoraʼs service allows users to ask questions and give answers. Additionally, users can comment on the questions and answers and "upvote" or "downvote" the answers. An "Answer Summary" can be created to reflect the consensus of the community. This summary is a wiki that can be edited by any registered user.

Below is taken from the Quora web-site:-

Quora is a continually improving collection of questions and answers created, edited, and organized by everyone who uses it. The most important thing is to have each question page become the best possible resource for someone who wants to know about the question.

One way you can think of it is as a cache for the research that people do looking things up on the web and asking other people. Eventually, when you see a link to a question page on Quora, your feeling should be: "Oh, great! That's going to have all the information I want about that." It's also a place where new stuff--that no one has written about yet--can get pulled onto the web

People use Quora to document the world around them. Over time, the database of knowledge should grow and grow until almost everything that anyone wants to know is available in the system. When knowledge is put into Quora, it is there forever to be shared with anyone in the future who is interes

Each question page on Quora is a reusable resource that should help everyone who has the question that the page is about. Answers on question pages don't depend on any context about the asker except for what is specified in the question text and details. There is only one version of each distinct question on the site, so everyone who is interested in or knows about that material is focused on that one place

Almost any public space on Quora can be edited by anyone who knows how to improve it. This includes the text of questions and the details around them, what topics are attached to which questions, and the summaries of answers. Quora relies on the good faith of everyone using it to make it a high quality resourse.

People can write their own answers to questions any time they think a question page could become a better resource with more information added to it. People who read question pages rate the different answers so that the best ones can rise to the top of the page and make it better. And people can comment on each other's answers to help them make those better as well.

People who use Quora keep it organized. Each question has a set of topics attached to it which makes it easier to find questions already on the site. The topics are also used to identify related questions and sometimes give context to a question.

People can follow topics so that the system can show them questions they are interested in and know about. People can follow individual questions too, which creates a waiting audience for anyone who wants to write an answer to the question. Some people call this "inverse blogging."

Everything on Quora is tied back to a person. Each question and answer has a revision history associated with it, and each change in the log is associated with the person who made it. People use their real names and pictures on Quora and have a short bio describing who they are; this helps anyone reading things they write to understand why they should believe what is written and take into account the author's perspective. For example, if Michael Jordan gives an answer to a question about basketball, that means something really different from someone who has never played the game giving an answer.

To give you an idea what it looks like on screen,here is a snapshot of my Quora page :-

Picture1

 

Posted on 01/18/2011 at 11:37 AM in Blogging, Facebook, social media, Twitter | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Who's using Twitter and How they're using it.

Interesting Infographic on who is using Twitter and what for.

As Twitter continues to wax in popularity, the disparity of Twitter users across all demographics continues to wane. But as the Pew study also indicates, there is still a large portion of Internet users who continue to have no involvement with the site.

Who's using Twitter and How they're using it.

Posted on 01/16/2011 at 08:01 PM in Blogging, social media, social networking, Twitter | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Have you customized your Facebook page?

I don't know if you've heard of Mari Smith,but,in my opinion, she is the Facebook guru.Towards the end of last year,ok,two weeks ago! She wrote a blog on which Facebook apps could be beneficiary to your FB page,so I thought I would share it with you!

There are thousands of apps that can help you engage with your fans.  In this article I’ll focus on the top 75 Facebook apps.

These apps allow you to customize your landing tabs, add your blog, add videos and photos, add chat, add polls, contests, geolocation, scheduling, email, ecommerce and much more.

Why Facebook Apps?

Why add apps to your Facebook Business (Fan) page? By customizing your Fan page with apps, you can significantly enhance the user’s experience. And, the more you keep your fans engaged and coming back for more, the more likely you’ll increase your “viral visibility.”

In other words, every time a fan interacts with your Fan page, it’s free advertising for you because each fan’s activity goes out into their stream (their wall and their friends’ News Feeds). To find the best apps to enhance your Fan page, you could spend endless hours browsing Facebook’s Application Directory:

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Facebook App Directory

However, there are literally tens of thousands from which to choose. Even clicking on the Business category as I’ve done in the screenshot above, we get apps like Bartab (send friends real drinks for $1) and Hugs and Hearts. I don’t know about you, but these are hardly business apps in my opinion!

There’s also Appbistro where you can browse their comprehensive directory of apps for businesses.

Now that Facebook nixed the ability to have our own custom content/apps on the Wall tab (left column), we need to get even more creative to ensure content on tabs is actually seen and that your fans interact with it; otherwise there’s not much point in having a dormant app that doesn’t enhance the user’s experience.

You can track your metrics via Facebook Insights and see which of your tabs gets the most clicks as shown in the screenshot below:

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Facebook Insights - Tab Views

However, it may be that very few of your tabs get much visibility except the actual Landing tab (my top scorer in the screenshot above). Your Landing tab is the default page that visitors see who have not yet joined your page (click Edit Page > Manage Permissions > select Default Landing Tab).

So, my recommendation is to focus on those apps that actually publish content to your own Fan page stream (your page wall and the News Feed of your fans). Plus, add a few apps that allow for heightened engagement at specified times, such as live streaming video and live chat apps as I’ve detailed below for you.

Custom Landing Tabs

Let’s start with custom content as it’s important to have a branded Landing tab for your Facebook page. In fact, as reported by InsideFacebook, BrandGlue founder Jeff Widman discovered that a custom Landing tab DOUBLES conversion to fans:

We ran an A/B test just four weeks ago to guesstimate the efficacy of a landing tab. We drove visitors to the fan page of a major brand using ads. Those ad-driven visitors converted to fans at a rate of approximately 47% WITH a landing tab. When we turned off the landing tab, those same ad-driven visitors converted to fans at approximately 23%. A VERY noticeable loss in conversions over the course of the campaign.

The most popular app by far to add your own custom content has been Facebook’s own Static FBML. Facebook will be replacing all FBML tabs and apps with iFrames at the end of 2010, at which time you’ll be able to create custom tabs using iFrames. However, Facebook will continue to support any and all tabs/apps created prior to when FBML gets deprecated. See the Developers Roadmap for updates on the timeline of changes.

By way of example, here’s the Landing tab for Social Media Examiner’s Facebook page. Note the call to action (”Click the Like button”) and the seamless branding:

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Social Media Examiner Facebook Fan Page - Landing Tab

Apps for adding custom content/branded Landing tab:

Here are my top two recommendations:

  • Static FBML – you’ll need to be familiar with coding or use a WISIWYG editor first. See Tabfusion’s Free Facebook Page Tab Maker here.   Plus, review these two helpful tutorials.
  • TabSite – free version with two TabSite subpages or choose from three paid levels. Complete WISIWYG editor; tabs within a main tab. TabSite is one of my favorites. It’s a very easy-to-use interface. I created the “RESOURCES” tab on my Facebook page using TabSite.
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TabSite - Facebook App

Facebook custom tab apps:

  • Welcome Tab
  • iwiPage

For easy-to-use templates, check out these options:

  • Static520 – UPDATE 12/21/10 – some users have reported this app provider is not working properly.
  • Pagemodo
  • FanPageEngine
  • PageLever
  • SplashTab
  • FaceItPages – UPDATE 12/30/10 – added this provider to the list.

These sites offer suites of apps, including custom Landing tabs. Some apps are free, some have a fee:

  • Involver
  • MiproApps
  • Tabfusion
  • NorthSocial
  • Momentus Media
  • Friend2Friend
  • ShortStack Lab
  • Avenue Social
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Involver.com - Facebook Suite of Apps

For a helpful review of some of these apps, see this post on TechCrunch. Plus, read Jay Baer’s review of several of these apps here. For a list of over 50 Facebook-approved developers, go here.

Designers/developers:

If you’re looking for full hands-on customization service at very affordable rates, my top choices are:

  • HyperArts
  • Likeable Media
  • Custom Fan Page Designs

See also:

  • KickApps
  • FanPageGenerator
  • Say It Social
  • Hilinsky Consulting
  • 140ology [Update: added 12/21/10]

Enterprise-level customization:

  • Vitrue
  • Buddy Media
  • Context Optional
  • Sprout
  • Friend2Friend
  • Avenue Social
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ContextOptional.com - Social Marketing Software and Services

See the complete list of Facebook Preferred Developer Consultants here.

Your Blog


Once you’re happy with your custom Landing tab, it’s time to import your blog’s RSS feed. My favorite app – used widely by many bloggers on Facebook – is Networked Blogs. It’s free and relatively simple to set up.

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Networked Blogs - Facebook app

Once you’re set up and have a few followers, you can place the Networked Blogs widget on your blog for added visibility. Any time you have the chance to display your fans’ faces, go for it!

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Networked Blogs - Facebook widget

You can add the Networked Blogs app to your personal profile in addition to your Fan page, if you wish. Alternate methods for pulling in your blog posts include:

  • Facebook’s Notes app (can be a lag time and is sometimes buggy).
  • Any of the RSS apps; e.g., RSS Graffiti, Social RSS or others.

RSS Feed and Content Publishers

You can easily import any of your content that has an RSS or Atom feed. For example, I import my Twitter favorites and Google Reader Shared Items using the RSS Graffiti app.

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RSS Graffiti Facebook app

RSS/Content apps include:

  • RSS Graffiti
  • Social RSS
  • Involver – RSS Feed (free version posts to the tab, Pro version posts to the wall)
  • North Social – RSS Feed
  • Objective marketer (complete publishing platform – used and recommended by Guy Kawasaki).

Video – YouTube and Viddler

I’ve been searching for some time for the ultimate YouTube app – one that automatically publishes new uploaded videos from your channel to your Facebook page wall, has a nice-looking tab, is easy to navigate and doesn’t take users away from your Fan page to view videos. Plus, if I were really waving a magic wand, I’d love it if YouTube gave us the option under their “Activity Sharing” feature to post liked or favorited videos to our Fan page (versus profile).

The closest I’ve found is YouTube Channels – I like their interface but the downside is they charge a monthly fee of $4.99 and I couldn’t get the Publish to Wall feature to work, so I canceled my subscription. Check out the YouTube Channel app by Involver (screenshot below) or the YouTube Video Box app.

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Involver's YouTube Channel Facebook app

If you have a Viddler account instead of or in addition to YouTube, check out the Viddler app.

Twitter 

I’m not a big fan of importing all tweets onto your Facebook wall, unless you don’t tweet that often! A more effective solution is to only publish select tweets TO your Fan page using this app:

  • Selective Tweets – once set up, this app allows you to post your tweets to your Facebook page simply by including “#fb” at the end of the tweet (or there is an option to include #fb anywhere in the tweet but I don’t recommend that option as it’s too easy to make a mistake!). You can choose to post tweets to your personal profile and/or Fan page.

Or, my favorite solution as mentioned in the RSS Feed section above is to only import your Twitter Favorites. I do this using the RSS Graffiti app. To find the RSS feed URL for your Twitter Favorites, with the new Twitter design the only way is to view your Twitter account while logged out:

image

Another Twitter solution is to simply install an app that pulls in all your tweets onto a tab, but doesn’t publish in the stream. I’m not sure there’s much benefit to this, as I say the primary goal here is to get into the News Feeds of your fans.

  • Involver’s Twitter Facebook app
  • North Social Twitter Feed Facebook app

To publish your Facebook content TO Twitter as tweets, connect your page using Facebook’s own Twitter app. You have a choice of six different types of content: Status Update, Photos, Video, Links, Notes and Events. Facebook’s publisher (the field where you type your updates) takes up to 420 characters; whereas tweets are 140 characters. With this Facebook to Twitter app, your content will automatically be truncated with a link back to your Facebook page which can help increase engagement by bringing your Twitter followers onto Facebook.

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Facebook's Twitter app

Flickr Photos

To display photos from your Flicker account, you might want to try the Flickr Tab app. See also the suite of app providers above.

SlideShare

If you have slides up on SlideShare, display them on your Facebook Fan page! You’ll have a nice display on the SlideShare tab, but I haven’t found that adding new slides automatically publishes to the wall. So, as you add new slides (and/or videos) to SlideShare.net, also publish the URL right on your Facebook page wall. What this does is pull in an actual player very similar to the video player with the blue play button icon. Your fans can play the slideshow right on your wall, and of course like and comment, providing that coveted News Feed ranking.

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SlideShare Facebook app

Reviews

Facebook has a Reviews app that you can add to your Fan page. The cool thing about this app is whenever a fan writes a review, it goes out into their stream (their wall and friends’ News Feeds). If you have a particularly negative review, spam or trolls, unfortunately there’s no way to remove individual reviews. If that ever happens, you could remove the app altogether. Otherwise, I think the Reviews app is an often-overlooked goldmine for businesses to have on their Fan pages!

Live Video

One of my favorite apps to spark immediate real-time, live engagement is Vpype. You can launch a webcast at any time (or scheduled time) to your fans and the app then posts an announcement on your wall. The app can hold up to 300 viewers with a live chat alongside your webcam broadcast. You can easily record and archive your shows; recordings include the full chat transcript too. Plus, you can even download the FLV file of your shows. The app tab is aptly named “Shows.”

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Vpype Facebook app

Read my review here from when I beta-tested the app for Vpype.

Alternatives to Vpype include:

  • Livestream
  • JustinTV
  • UstreamTV
  • Linqto (going live January 2011 – this should be a very popular webinar/livestream app!)

Live Chat

Along with offering impromptu or scheduled live video broadcasts, you could also offer live chat sessions with your fans. One such app I’ve tried and like is Clobby. The one downside of this app is the obnoxious banner ad at the top of the chatroom as you can see in the screenshot below. However, simply scroll the page down enough to hide the banner while chatting.

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Clobby - Facebook live chat app

Whenever you open your chatroom, you can publish an announcement to your Fan page wall, which of course goes out in the stream and fans start coming over to chat. Publish a tweet as well to get even more people in the chatroom! You could host a regular live chat for your fans; I suggest capturing the chat stream with an app like ScreenFlow for Mac or Camtasia Studio for Mac or PC – that way, you have an archive to refer to.

For a more upscale chat room, see Involver’s premium Facebook Connect Chat app. [UPDATE: 12/21/10 - this app is not displayed on Involver's website but IS available if you contact them.]

FAQs

If you find yourself continually answering the same questions for your clients and community, be sure to compile a Frequently Asked Questions section – the simple FAQ Page app allows you to have an FAQ tab on your Fan page that you can direct fans to when answering questions on your wall. A couple of things to note about this app: you can’t reorder the questions once inserted, so you may wish to compile your FAQs and all their answers in a separate document before pasting each one in. Also, it would be great if each question had its own unique URL so you could just share the link in answer to questions on your wall, but this isn’t the case.

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FAQ Facebook app

Polls and Quizzes

For a poll or quiz app to work well, you want your fans to quickly and easily participate and for that activity to spark more engagement and visibility. If users have to jump through extra hoops to participate, they’ll likely just move on. This screenshot shows the Fan Appz poll app live on the Family Guy Fan page – I like how the app provides the option for voters to share (on their personal profiles) and also to share on their Fan pages!

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FanAppz.com Poll app for Facebook

Some choices include (free and paid):

  • Poll
  • FanAppz Polls and Quizzes
  • Widgetbox Poll app
  • Involver’s Poll app

Contests and Promotions

Facebook’s rules around contests, drawings, competitions and sweepstakes are rigorous. Though many Facebook users are either unaware of the rules or choose to ignore them, I personally feel it’s not worth the risk to administer a promotion of any kind that doesn’t adhere to Facebook’s rules. In one fell swoop, you could lose your carefully built Fan page.

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Facebook Promotions - Target example

The safest way to run any kind of contest or drawing on your Fan page is to use a third-party app such as:

  • WildFire
  • Fanappz
  • Vitrue
  • BuddyMedia
  • Votigo
  • ContextOptional
  • BulbStorm
  • NorthSocial
  • Momentus Media
  • Friend2Friend
  • Strutta

Apps for Local Businesses

With the boom of LBS (Location-based Services), local business have more ways to integrate social and mobile media than ever before. Why not show off your Foursquare customer check-ins with an app on your Fan page?

Plus, be sure to claim your Facebook Place page: just search for your own business name on Facebook and look for the link at the foot of the Place page that says “Is this your business?” Once claimed, you’ll have the opportunity to merge your Place page with your Fan page. The resulting new page looks rather different, so think carefully about this. (For examples of merged pages, take a look at Iron Horse Vineyards and The Ellen Show).

  • Foursquare Place Widget – see screenshot below
  • Yelp Reviews by North Social
  • Store Locator by Involver
  • Facebook Places and Deals
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Foursquare Place Widget - Facebook app

Appointment Scheduling

Make it super-easy for your Facebook fans, clients and prospects to book time with you. Add a tab synched with your appointment scheduling platform of choice. Remember, each tab has its own unique URL; you can easily direct your fans to your appointment tab.

  • Schedulicity app (requires a Schedulicity account)
  • Genbook BookNow! app (requires a Genbook account)
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Schedulicity app

Contact Forms

Ideally, you have your own email marketing service provider as outlined in the next section. However, perhaps you wish to get started with a simple contact form on your Facebook page. Here are a few options:

  • Contact Me
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ContactMe app

Embed on an FBML tab:

  • Response-O-Matic
  • JotForm
  • Allforms

See this helpful post by Tim Ware at HyperArts with a review and tutorial on JotForm and Allforms.

Email Marketing Apps

Your Facebook Fan page can be a tremendous source of traffic and a means to collect email addresses of your fans. Plus, some email marketing service providers have a feature that allows you to post your latest enewsletter to your Fan page. Check out any of the following:

  • Mailchimp
  • Constant Contact
  • Nutshell Mail
  • Delivra via TabSite integration. (See Delivra on Facebook)
  • AWeber
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NutshellMail - Facebook integration

Ecommerce Apps – Sell Products on Your Page

Many Facebook page owners often ask me if it’s okay to put up “Buy now” buttons and actually try to make sales directly from their Fan pages. I say “Go for it!!” If your fans are already spending time on your page learning about you and your products and services, you just never know when someone might be ready to buy from you. There are a few choices for adding a shopping cart tab to your fan page, including:

  • Ecwid – free, run your own store, mirrored on many sites
  • Payvment
  • ShopTab
  • VendorShop [UPDATE: added 12/21/10. Thanks to Krishna De for the tip + review.]
  • OWJO [UPDATE: added 12/21/10. Thanks to Krishna De for the tip + review.]
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Ecwid - Ecommerce app

 


About the Author, Mari Smith

Mari Smith is a widely-recognized social media speaker and trainer and is coauthor of “Facebook Marketing: An Hour A Day.” Fast Company calls Mari “the Pied Piper of the Online World.” Follow Mari on Twitter: @marismith. Other posts by Mari Smith »

 

I hope this is a help to you ........ I know it is to me!

Posted on 01/05/2011 at 12:29 PM in Blogging, Facebook, Foursquare, social media, social networking, Twitter, Workshops | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)

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The Curse of the Twitter Hijackers

Today I'm hijacking one of Andy's Sirona Says blogs as it's about Twitter and includes some good tips for Twitter newbies!!

 

Twitter Hijacking
Last week I saw something on Twitter that a) really wound me up and b) reinforced the notion that the unscrupulous will always exploit an opportunity to meet their needs.

Now, to be fair, finding something to wind you up on Twitter is not hard - there is so much diverse opinion every second of every day on Twitter, that you can always find something to disagree with! But that makes Twitter refreshing doesn't it?
There is a growing trend of people that are now using the power of Twitter for manipulative means. I call these people 'traffic snatchers' or Twitter hijackers! They are simply craving internet traffic - directing people to sales pages to sell them crap services, courses or worse; website owners desperate for the next traffic (visitor) spike on their analytics page; PR companies desperate for website 'hits' to justify their existence to their clients etc etc
While I accept this form of marketing (brand hijacking) has been around for a long time, it still doesn't make it right or acceptable, does it? I have compiled my list of example of the types of Twitter Hijacking from these traffic snatchers (if you have seen others, please share them in the comments):

  1. Lies and Untruths. This is exactly what it is - telling a blatant lie or untruth to get people to click on a link to a website. It is directing traffic under complete false pretences, and is the worse case of link bait. We have all been victims of this - see a headline, go to the blog/article and you find out it is complete crap >> #FAIL
  2. Trending Topics. Twitter happily shares with you all the trending topics on Twitter at the time you are on it. A number of people then simply insert the relevant trending #hashtags into their 'tweets' just to be found in trending searches. Great if there is a relevance, infuriating if they aren't!! >>#FAIL
  3. Multiple Hashtag Syndrome. This is simply the gratuitous use of multiple #hashtags in a 'tweet'. Sometimes it is like a, 'how many #hashtags can you get in a 'tweet' competition'!!  As in no.2 above, when they are of no relevance, it is just a pathetic attempt to snatch traffic! >> #FAIL
  4. Conferences and Events. For me one of the superb benefits of Twitter is the ability to follow an industry event or conference via the Twitter back channel. This is simply tracking the #hashtag of the event, and following the conversation of people 'tweeting' from the event using the #hashtag in every 'tweet'. If you can't attend an event, then this is a brilliant way of following the conversation. Every event comes with its own #hashtag.
    >>> Enter the traffic snatchers! They know that there is going to be a good following at certain events, so start using the #hashtag in their tweets including links to their blogs, services or products. If they are relevant to the audience, fine; but mostly they are not they are just traffic snatchers! >> #FAIL
  5. 'Celebrity' Snatching. There are many  (what I call) industry celebrities on Twitter - just to clarify, I mean recognised industry thought leaders - and they all have one thing in common. They all have massive amounts of people following their every word. The good old Twitter hijackers know this of course, and will gratuitously insert the @usernames of these people in their tweets just to add credence to their tweet, hoping it will make more people click on their dubious link. >>#FAIL

These are just a few of the tricks you will see every day on Twitter. If you do come across it then there is just one way of dealing with them......... UNFOLLOW them!  It probably won't make a blind bit of difference, but at least you won't have to fall victim to their traffic snatching crap again!!

Have you seen any cracking examples of Twitter hijacking?


Posted on 11/29/2010 at 09:30 AM in Blogging, social media, Twitter, Weblogs, Workshops | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Controlling your privacy when using Foursquare,Facebook Places etc.....

Images 2Images
 
 

I know a lot of you are worried about the safety of Foursquare and Facebook places,the 'advertising' of where you are ,especially is you're not at home.

Here is a blog written by Peter Wylie,who is lead researcher for Three Ships Media, an emerging media marketing company that specializes in using blogs and social networks to connect clients with target customers online.

Here are his thoughts ......

How to Control Your Privacy With Foursquare and Other Geoloaction Services

By Peter Wylie
Published November 17, 2010

social media toolsGeolocation is one of the hottest trends in social networking today. Users enjoy connecting with friends at nearby locations. Businesses are beginning to take note of the opportunity to tie their brick-and-mortar locations to their online marketing.

In addition to the main local social networking applications—Foursquare and Gowalla—Google, Facebook and Twitter have added geolocation features to their services to tap into this trend.

As users provide more information about their location, serious privacy implications are beginning to surface. For instance, a Webroot study released in July 2010 found that more than half of survey respondents who used geolocation services were worried their privacy was at risk.

Privacy Problems

The first wave of criticism about the privacy implications of geolocation social networks followed the launch in February 2010 of Please Rob Me, which combined people’s physical location through geolocation services with data about their residence from other public data.

When people were “checked in” at other places, unscrupulous individuals could find out and take advantage through Please Rob Me, though the site’s founders said they were only trying to demonstrate the problems posed by sharing geolocation data.

In March 2010, the Electronic Privacy Information Center filed a lawsuit with the FTC alleging that Google violated people’s privacy by making geolocation data available to the general public in its Google Buzz product.

The geolocation privacy backlash continued with the launch of Facebook Places, which enabled users who had recently checked into a place to see all other users who had been there through the “Here Now” feature.

This launch prompted the American Civil Liberties Union to put out a data sheet on how people could protect their online privacy and voice concerns about the practice of listing physical locations through geolocation services.

Social Networks React

facebook place

An example of a Facebook Place

To assure users that participating in geolocation social networking was safe and controllable, social networks began to provide additional privacy controls. This was likely in response to the concern and potential litigation regarding privacy and by the spate of violence through Craigslist connections.

Twitter users can select whether to include their whereabouts for each message. Privacy advocates were never as keen to target it for criticism, though many of the same negatives exist for sharing location data in this way. Twitter also lets you delete your entire geolocation history, which makes users feel more comfortable with the choice to display location data.

In response to the privacy backlash, Google made the option to make contacts private more prominent. It also allowed users to block Buzz followers directly from profile pages.

Facebook addressed privacy generally after several separate privacy issues
arose over information-sharing settings, but has yet to make public statements about the implications of Facebook Places on privacy.

Potential Solutions

face2face

Face2Face is a geolocation social networking service that restricts location data to user-specified friends.

Startup geolocation companies are popping up to serve the supposed market need for a service with the best of both worlds. Once such company, face2face, markets itself as “a discreet way to let your friends know when you’re nearby.” It restricts geolocation data to specific friends set by the user, giving more control over the privacy question back to the end consumer.

Another way to protect against negative uses of geolocation data is to take precautions to avoid tying your current physical location to your home address. Jason Falls gave this sound advice in a column he did on safety tips for Gowalla and Foursquare.

In the Webroot study mentioned above, many users of social networks—geolocation social networks in particular—did not follow best practices to keep interactions on these networks safe. For example, 31% of survey respondents accepted friend requests from strangers. These types of shocking data points show that people are probably not treating online interactions with enough caution, especially those with a geolocation component.

Geolocation social networks do raise some privacy concerns worth noting, but prudent use of each service, including understanding how to properly establish privacy settings, clears up much of the concern. As long as you’re smart about it, geolocated interactions will stay as harmless as other online social interactions.

I hope this is a help to you.


 

Posted on 11/25/2010 at 08:12 AM in Blogging, Facebook, Foursquare, social media, social networking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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All you need to know about The New Facebook Messages

                       FB messages





Have you heard? Facebook has a new messaging service,but if, like me,you're a bit confused by it all,maybe this blog post by Mashable will help explain it all :-

 Facebook Messages Splashscreen

The first thing you will see is that there is a new version of Facebook Messages. Clicking on the pop-up button takes you to this splash page,which explains the benefits and gives you a 'Giant' upgrade button to press.

Fb-messages 1

@facebook.com E-Mail

If you press the upgrade button,you'll immediately taken to the new Messages Inbox. You will receive this notification,asking whether you would like to activate your @facebook.com e-mail address:-


Fb-email-640 2

The New Facebook Inbox

This is the new Facebook inbox. It's a lot like the old one,although it does a better job of showing you who sent the last message in a conversation. It also shows you when you've received an attachment and is cleaner overall :-

Facebook-inbox-640 3

 

Facebook Messages Invites

This is the invites page for Facebook Messages. The new product is invite only,so to get access you have to have a friend invite you.

:-

Fb-invites-640 4

The "Other Messages" Inbox

This is the "Other Messages" inbox, mostly meant for messages sent to you by specific events or Facebook pages:-

Fb-other-messages-640 5

Archiving a Message

This is what happens when you try to archive a message for the first time. Facebook wants you to archive your messages so you can refer to them two,five or fifty years from now. Deleting messages has to be done from inside the message itself :-

6

Receiving a Message

This is the interface for receiving a brand new message. I (Benn Parr,co-director of Mashable) got this message from Mashable reporter Samuel Axon, who e-mails my @facebook.com e-mail address :-

Samuel-axon-640 7

Texting in Facebook Messages

If you check the mobile icon box, you can send a friend a text message. In this case my friend doesn't have SMS activated, so I can request that he turns it on. In most cases this will just send Samuel a text message :-

Ben-sam-texting-620 8

Sending a Facebook Message

This shows off the messaging and "quick reply" features of the new Messages interface.Quick Messaging means you only have to hit "enter" to send the message :-

Ben-sam-conversation-615 9

 

I hope this helps explain it all to you,and as soon as I have one,I'll be letting you all know my @facebook.com e-mail address! :o) :o)

 

Posted on 11/17/2010 at 12:43 PM in Blogging, Facebook, social media, social networking, Web/Tech, Workshops | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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What is Foursquare ?

Foursquare

Foursquare is a social networking site,founded by Dennis Crowley and Naveen Selvadurai in New York City,which started out in 2009 with limited availability in only 100 worldwide metro areas. In January 2010, Foursquare changed their location model to allow check-ins from any location worldwide.As of March 2010, the service had 500,000 users internationally.

It is a web and mobile application that allows registered users to connect with friends and update their location. Points are awarded for "checking in" at venues. Users can choose to have their check-ins posted on their accounts on Twitter, Facebook or both. Users can also earn badges by checking in at locations with certain tags, for check-in frequency or for other patterns such as time of check-in.

A sample of the badges you can earn are :-

Newbie-foursquare-badge-300x297       Adventurer-Foursquare-Badge       Boat_big        Screen-shot-2010-04-06-at-9-31-37-pm    
Newbie badge       Adventurer Badge     On A Boat Badge      Jetsetters Badge


Once you have checked into a place severel times you can become a Mayor !!

                               Mayor-crown-full.jpg.scaled500


On a serious note Foursquare can be used as a tool to encourage customers into your business,this is something that Starbucks have been heavily involved with by creating the Barista Badge. What can you offer to yoyr customers ?

Posted on 10/27/2010 at 12:22 PM in Blogging, Facebook, Foursquare, social media, Twitter, Workshops | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Social Media Channels of Choice for Business

Social Media can be used in a whole range of different ways, and of course depending on the types of business or departments within a business, different platforms can be used. This is well explained in the graphic below (originally posted over at the Sirona Says blog).

Social Media Channels of Choice for Companies



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Posted on 06/25/2010 at 10:05 AM in Blogging, Facebook, social media, social networking | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Sirona Social Media video


For Information of the Sirona Social Media Workshops >>CLICK HERE<< or watch our short video below first

Posted on 06/15/2010 at 11:31 AM in Blogging, Facebook, social media, social networking, Twitter, Workshops | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Check out our new video

One thing that we were keen to do is to create a series of video,s that in 20-30 seconds explain waht we can do for you at Sirona Social Media. Here is the first of that series.


Let us know what you think.

Posted on 04/27/2010 at 09:06 AM in Blogging, Facebook, social media, social networking, Twitter | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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