Category / Web

» Breaking: Google is redirecting Google China to Google Hong Kong, effectively removing the filter and uncensoring mainland access to Google search results. The Government won't like this. More soon. (0)

» Of note: Techmeme, one of the most popular technology news aggregators with human editors, has launched Mediagazer, a news aggregator for the media/journalism and distribution sector. (0)

» Bloomberg reports that Dell Rings Up $6.5 Million in Sales Using Twitter, far more than Twitter does. Interesting stats. (0)

Behavioral Advertising, the FTC, and the Big Picture of Advertising

03 Aug 09 / by Mark Bao / Analysis, Business, Web / / Comments

BusinessWeek reports today on the implications of the Federal Trade Commission’s shifting of focus towards targeted web advertisements under the leadership of newly-appointed FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz. Leibowitz, in the past, has fought spyware, adware, and general malware on the internet, as well as spam, and is also an advocate for net neutrality.

Leibowitz now has in his crosshairs malicious use of behavioral targeting, and is so concerned by the practice that he has allegedly made it a “top priority” of the FTC. BusinessWeek defines behavioral targeting as the “delivering ads to individuals based on the Web pages they visit and searches they carry out,” which is an on-target description of the method. Behavioral targeting is used to increase the focused audience of an advertising campaign, specifying parameters for which the advertising system follows based on the kind of websites that the user visits. From this data, the advertiser (as well as the advertising network) can gain a better idea of who exactly their target audience is, trackable using a cookie.

Why Behavioral Targeting Isn’t Malicious

Behavioral targeting is the use of data known about a user to better target advertisements to the user. The viewer of the advertisements can choose to look at, ignore, or even click advertisements. To the user, a better-targeted advertisement about something they are in fact interested in is certainly better than an advertisement hardly targeted to them at all.

Many sites thrive on their visitor volume that generates ad revenues. The largest internet properties by visitor volume are all based on one business model: advertising. In fact, 14 of the 15 top sites in the world (ranked by Alexa) rely on advertising: Google (GOOG) (search and AdSense advertising generates 99.5% of their revenues), Yahoo! (YHOO), Facebook, YouTube (GOOG), Windows Live/Bing (MSFT), MSN (MSFT), Blogger (GOOG), Baidu (BIDU), Yahoo! Japan (YHOO), MySpace (NWSA), Google India (GOOG), Google Denmark (GOOG), QQ, and Twitter are mostly, and almost completely supported by advertising.

With advertising being such a huge force in the economy, however, it must be allowed to have free reign within reason, lest regulations placed on advertising make it less and less targeted, disallowing these sites to thrive to their maximum potential. The question is: what’s the threshold of ‘within reason’?

Wrong

In one action that Leibowitz has taken against spyware and behavioral advertising, the wrong way to approach the method is shown.

In June retailer Sears (SHLD) settled an FTC complaint charging that Sears had failed to disclose the extent to which it was tracking the activities of certain shoppers, who had been paid $10 to download a piece of “research” software to their computers. The settlement forced Sears to end the practice and destroy all the data it had generated.

Right

Behavioral advertising done right is based on a few key points: anonymity, security, and protection of personal information. Behavioral advertising’s goal is to present more relevant information to a user. The goal is not to be able to know a user’s personal data. Websites one visits is a disposable, as well as random, set. These websites certainly can give a profile of a user; however, there need not be any connection. Security is obvious: secure the data. Don’t make it available on the client-side, and don’t make it possible for a single attack vector to be able to access said data. Protection of personal information is the last. Leibowitz is correct: information such as

Personal data such as location gets into gray area. Location isn’t a huge problem, since without any other kind of personally identifiable information it is itself useless to exploit, and only useful to the targeting of advertising if an advertiser so chooses to use this tool. Location, like a profile of a user based on what websites she visits, is a random and arbitrary set of information, in the cloud.

Legislation and Opt-In

With the assistance of Leibowitz, Congress is preparing legislation for a middle-ground of behavioral targeting: opt-in.

[Leibowitz] supports the controversial approach of making more of the targeted ads on the Internet “opt-in”—meaning they would require consent from Web users before collecting data—and is in talks with members of Congress intent on drafting legislation for online ads.

ValueClick (VCLK) GM has the right idea:

Bill Todd, general manager at online ad network ValueClick (VLCK), says an opt-in measure “would force our company and others to rethink how we do business today, and I think it would destroy much of the innovation that many people in our industry have developed.”

Consumers Don’t Understand Advertising

The problem with opt-in is that it puts the decision of whether to use behavioral data with the consumer, rather than with the advertising network. To the consumer, this has to be a conscious choice, much like opting-in to a online newsletter.

However, the anatomy of a choice is: it has to create value for the USER. Most consumers, however, do not understand the advertising process, and how it does trickle down to both the improvement of value for the consumer, as well as improvement of value for the service that the advertising supports.

Ads have a bad stigma attached to them, since the dawn of advertising. Especially on the web. There are few things that are more annoying than the loud smiley flash advertisements. (Which, I may add, is doing advertising wrong. With advertising, the big picture of the entire campaign and how your company is branded is extremely important. If you’re going to create something that sticks out, it’s going to create a bit of notoriety for being unique. Make sure that’s positive. Being a notorious advertisement campaign positively is possible. Dos Equis. Being a notorious advertisement campaign negatively is also possible. Smiley advertisements. Choose wisely.)

It boils down to: users don’t want advertisements. The process is not understood by the general public, and although it works out for everyone, you can’t change the fact that the consumer will certainly not opt into anything. Especially advertising.

Big Picture

Behavioral advertising done right increases the quality of advertisements, and thus, the quality of the sites that are supported by advertising. Advertising is but promotion of a product to interested parties. Advertising is sometimes a crapshoot. Why? Users decide whether they want to be told something, or whether they want to buy something. Behavioral advertising does not prey on creepy details about a user. Tools such as behavioral targeting help the crapshoot of advertising become easier and more effective.

When a user is subject to advertising, they are given a choice how to react. There is no obligation to react in any one way or another. It doesn’t force them to take out their wallet and enter their credit card.

Advertising puts the product in front of the user. If they are interested, they will accept that the product is more important to them, and gives more value to them, than the currency it costs. That’s the essence of a monetary transaction. Something is worth more than what you’re giving for it. A product and money, respectively.

When targeted advertising is shown, it improves the chance that there will be more interested viewers. These interested viewers have one thing on their mind: is this product worth more than the money I paid for it? If the answer is yes, not only is the advertisement a success, so is the targeting. And so is the fact that the product adds value to the consumer.

Disclaimer: I personally have knowledge in behavioral advertising because of previous and current experience in the advertising sector, which does include behavioral advertising (Adaptance). There are right ways and wrong ways to approach behavioral advertising. Every behavioral advertising network must follow responsible methods of data acquisition, mining, and retention, and mine is not an exception.

YouTube Dropping Support for IE6, Good for Regular Users, Doesn’t Matter in Corporate

14 Jul 09 / by Mark Bao / Web / / Comments

youtubelogoGist: YouTube no longer supporting IE6 in the near future. Will affect some consumer users. Won’t affect corporate.

Today, TechCrunch reported that YouTube was to drop support for Microsoft (MSFT)’s archaic browser Internet Explorer 6. YouTube issued a notice to IE6 users that support for the browser was to be discontinued soon. While a fantastic move by Google (GOOG) for not only themselves but for web designers and developers and end-users alike, there’s no concrete way to quantify how much of an effect eradication of IE6 from YouTube would

First, the good news. The good news is that the regular internet crowd still using IE6 and that has not upgraded already to IE7 or IE8 will most likely upgrade to IE7/8 or a newer browser. YouTube’s move will deal the death blow to IE6 in the consumer space.

Unfortunately, corporate and business users will be with IE6 for most likely years to come. The browser, released in 2001, is what IT departments depend on still tot his day. So if you’re building web applications or HypertextApplications for the business/corporate sector, IE6 is still an absolute necessity: corporate environments won’t be adamant about upgrading their browsers so they can use YouTube or Digg.

I’m going to guess that the percentage of IE6 users will decrease by 20% (from 9.37% to 7.5%). Strangely, Microsoft doesn’t actually seem to have any problem converting IE7 users to IE8—IE7 went from 53% to 30%, with most upgrading to IE8 which now has a 15% market share. Source.

Google Chrome OS: Google’s Master Plan

08 Jul 09 / by Mark Bao / Analysis, Technology, Web / / Comments

google_chrome_logoGist: Google is creating a thin client with their new netbook operating system Google Chrome OS, which will allow simple components to access Google’s services as applications. Google Chrome, as the base, is an already-advanced browser and web renderer. Google’s initiative may mean war with Microsoft: Google Chrome OS, developed enough, and with enough power to replace desktop applications, may replace the need for an OS as the powerhouse and instead put it in the cloud with Google services and clients being thin clients. Google may expand this to their Android handset system and then to many other interfaces.

Google Inc. (GOOGannounced their new initiative today, the Google Chrome OS. Based on the Google Chrome browser software, it is a light, mobile operating system for netbooks, due to be open-sourced Q4 2009, but due to release Q3-Q4 2010.

Google Chrome OS is an open source, lightweight operating system that will initially be targeted at netbooks. Later this year we will open-source its code, and netbooks running Google Chrome OS will be available for consumers in the second half of 2010. Because we’re already talking to partners about the project, and we’ll soon be working with the open source community, we wanted to share our vision now so everyone understands what we are trying to achieve.

Yeah. We know exactly what Google wants to achieve: the thin client. A thin client provides a view and an input, and general processing and memory; however, the data storage, crunching, and application serving is done from a third party source, accessible through the internet. Netbooks represented a large surge in the thin client idea, building primarily upon inexpensive Intel (INTC) Atom processors, cheap memory, portability, and in some cases open-source Linux distributions such as Ubuntu.

However, Google Chrome OS may not just be “just another Linux distro” to power notebooks: its very premise makes it be based on the idea of a thin client, completely. GCOS, built upon the (relatively) advanced Google Chrome browser, powered by Webkit, offers many advanced application-like parallels. Not only does it allow for the use of the Canvas HTML element for advanced drawing capabilities inside the browser, but local data storage and more.

We’ve already seen web technologies as an OS in action. We’ve seen them starting with Google using XMLHttpRequest in Suggest and Maps, with Adaptive Path’s Jesse James Garrett’s coining of Ajax, then the replacement of desktop apps with web-based ones with Meebo and Google Docs, and recently with the release of Palm Inc.’s (PALM) Palm Pre device, based on WebOS.

There’s actually some interesting foreshadowing in Jesse James Garrett’s early speculations into the power of Ajax:

The same simplicity that enabled the Web’s rapid proliferation also creates a gap between the experiences we can provide and the experiences users can get from a desktop application. … That gap is closing. Take a look at Google Suggest… Now look at Google Maps. Google Suggest and Google Maps are two examples of a new approach to web applications that we at Adaptive Path have been calling Ajax.

Google will nearly eliminate the OS itself. Most of what people want in an OS can happen in a browser. Google has documents and collaboration down with Google Docs. Search down with Google itself, and Google Desktop for local search. Email and chat through Gmail. In the future, organization communications through Google Wave. Calendar and tasks through Google Calendar. Google has created the ultimate thin client system that allows for the browser to take over the OS.

Google’s master plan extends into the integration of the browser into the OS. Google might wage a war of the OS: not with Windows vs. Linux, but Windows vs. the Web OS. Google notes that current “operating systems that browsers run on were designed in an era where there was no web.” Apparently—the current operating systems aren’t enough for the future. Supplementation of the web with the OS is not enough. The OS must be immersed with the web.

And Google wishes to spearhead that immersion. That immersion will primarily be in the form of a thin client, with everything handled on the cloud, the client acting as solely a view of information and an input point. Through this, Google can essentially build this thin client interface into multiple points in reality, not the least being their mobile operating system Android.

Google is going down to the hardware and integrating the user’s own system with Google. And in the future, their mobile phones, and soon, perhaps a huge portion of their technological experience.

——
Disclosure: Mark Bao is the CEO of Avecora, an early-stage communications integration and consumer electronics firm.

Craigslist Advertising for Charity: A Novel Philanthropic Idea

08 Jul 09 / by Mark Bao / Web / / Comments

craigslist_logoGist: Putting advertising on Craigslist that donates money to charity is an option, but CEO Jim Buckmaster says the decision will rest with the user. A Facebook group by Kevin Fischer gathers support for such an action, and estimates that doing so would generate millions for charity to achieve Craigslist’s running goal of benefitting the greater good.

Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster apparently isn’t going crazy about profits, profits, profits. Buckmaster recently noted that Craigslist was “not trying to maximize revenue” and that they remain to have an advertising-free, fee-free (except for in the Jobs category) system. On CEO Jim Buckmaster’s own Craigslist bio page, he lists that he’s “possibly the only CEO ever described as anti-establishment, a communist, and a socialistic anarchist“.

On the same page, however, he notes that Craigslist wishes to continue achieving a “greater good” goal. Although Craigslist does not currently serve advertising, and they don’t intend to do so because “no users have been requesting we run text ads.”

However, there’s a new method of action for Craigslist to achieve the greater good: run ads and donate the proceeds to charity. One of their monetization streams, the purchase of Craigslist-themed merchandise from their store on e-tailer Zazzle, donates all of their proceeds to Craigslist’s 501(c)3 organization Craigslist Foundation. Using ads could be another method for benefiting the Craigslist Foundation or any other charity in general. When asked how an advertising system for Craigslist for the sole purpose of charity donation would be received by Craigslist, they put the spotlight to the users to see whether they “should raise revenue and plow it into charity.”

Biomedical entrepreneur Kevin Fischer started a Facebook group entitled “The Craigslist Revolution: click to join and raise ONE BILLION for charity!” He quotes rough calculations on the impact of advertising on Craigslist:

With 20 billion pageviews a month, a Google Adwords banner would bring in about 200 million dollars a year. Over five years that will be well over a billion dollars. If you decide to hire an employee to sell the ads instead of using Google, that money could double or triple or quintuple.

$200 million a year would be an astounding amount of money to be donated to one or distributed to multiple charities. In fact, the operation will undoubtedly generate multi-millions in revenue at the least, which still would be quite a large sum to donate. With the user experience not being impacted much by adding the advertisement, users may be sympathetic to the goal of raising money for charity. Fischer also suggests that ads can be hidden by users, so that they can continue their normal Craigslist experience.

A possible use of Google (GOOG) AdSense with an explanation of its aims (and that goes with Craigslist design) could be:

craigslist_example

Another benefit is that Google AdSense works best with content to achieve contextually-targeted ads, and thus the advertising can be highly targeted (though advertising doesn’t necessarily need to be through Google, as Fischer stated, but rather could be through Craigslist’s own advertising system.) Advertisers should also be sympathetic towards Craigslist’s aims.

Fischer also started a social voting site for where Craigslist should donate revenues to on Slinkset (a Y Combinator startup).

Craigslist is an unorthodox company, and this is an unorthodox method of fundraising. However, it could result in massive revenues for charity that may benefit the targets of donation immensely.

Can Yahoo! Recover?

04 Jul 09 / by Mark Bao / Analysis, Business, Technology, Web / / Comments

Can Yahoo! Recover?
TechMeme reported today that Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO)’s celebrity content site Omg! is receiving excellent reception from the public [link]. Yahoo! Inc., who after its snafu with Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) due to a buyout offer (which was declined by then-CEO >>name<<), saw their stock price plummet to below-offer valuation.
Now that Yahoo! Inc. is under

Gist: Yahoo! has a facet of itself that differs it from its competitors, and this gives them somewhat of an upper hand, despite their search business being not up to par with Google. Consumers will still flock to Yahoo! for its content and unique (but obvious) offerings.

TechMeme reported today that Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO)’s celebrity content site Omg! is receiving excellent reception from the public. Yahoo! Inc., who after its snafu with Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) due to a buyout offer (which was declined by then-CEO Jerry Yang, saw their stock price plummet to below-offer valuation.

Now that Yahoo! is under new management under ex-Autodesk (ADSK) CEO Carol Bartz, it’s interesting to see the new direction that Yahoo! may go into. Their search, at 9% market share, still isn’t beating Google (GOOG) at 80% (source). However, they remain the #2 trafficked site on the internet (Alexa ratings) behind Google. Yahoo! has three facets: it provides 1) consumer services, 2) business services, and 3) content.

Google, as well as other monoliths in the web space, provide both 1) and 2), in many areas such as (what Yahoo! currently dominates in, and has done so for years) mail, news, search, and finance. However, Yahoo! has the upper hand on the content area. Their content generation that they employ gives them a different consumer perspective: while Google provides services, Yahoo! provides services, and content. Google, on the other hand, doesn’t do content, for the most part.

The content generation present at Yahoo! include the omg! celebrity news site, Yahoo! Astrology, and Yahoo! Shine, Yahoo!’s lifestyle information site. What else separates Yahoo! from its competitors? Yahoo! Personals, Fantasy Football, HotJobs, and Upcoming.

The main idea is that Yahoo! provides information services for consumers. Their various services are so multi-faceted that consumers have much to pick from, from their selection. They provide more than news; real estate, job search, health, games, and directory.

Yahoo! services

On the other hand, Google is a data-oriented company. Google’s offerings, such as Docs/Spreadsheets, search, calendar, Gmail, and Reader, are targeted to deal with data, not information. The difference is in the nature of the content: is it generated by you, or is it generated by someone else?

There’s obviously overlap, but the idea is: Yahoo! is a lifestyle company. Their offerings are targeted toward more of a lifestyle approach, such as with omg!, Astrology, Shine, or games, tickets, sports, and the like. Yahoo! is about media. Yahoo!’s competitors, such as Google, are more about getting work done.

The slice of the market that is interested in lifestyle content is not miniscule. There will always be a large market for lifestyle content, and Yahoo! has a multitude of services that make it a monolith of content and services. Yahoo!’s greater flexbility in what exactly they want to offer sets them apart from the rest of the competition.

Yahoo! is a different animal than, say, Google: while search is an important part, it’s not the most important part. Yahoo!’s services allow it to target ordinary people on the web with content, information, and general services. So can it recover? Maybe. They need to focus on what sets them apart, not what makes them the same. And maybe—at some point—they might make a comeback.

Top Merchant Processor Authorize.net, Others Down in Seattle Fisher Plaza Fire

03 Jul 09 / by Mark Bao / General, Web / / Comments

Fisher Plaza Gist: Fire at Fisher Plaza, a “mission-critical” Seattle-based datacenter and colo space. Authorize.net payment processor and others down for hours.

A fire in the Fisher Plaza facility has taken down top merchant processing gateway Authorize.net along with others. Fisher Plaza is a state-of-the-art datacenter, office space, and colo space in Seattle, WA. Authorize.net is a merchant processing gateway that provides APIs for the processing of credit cards, e-checks, transfers, and other methods of payment to its customers.

Authorize.net’s Twitter stream showed signs of recovery as the situation was rectified. Authorize.net has since restored their processing gateway for their production server. Throughout the problem, Authorize.net was quick and calm to take care of the situation, resolving it and conversing with their customers. Authorize.net payment processing was restored at 11am PST.

It should be interesting to see how the fire in what Fisher Plaza calls the “the only mission-critical business community in the Northwest combining Class A office, data center, colocation and retail space” will affect the space. The more mission-critical, the more money, the more responsibility Fisher Plaza holds in keeping service smooth. Taking down hundreds of websites and a top payment processing gateway will result in millions in lost sales for Authorize.net itself, not to mention for the other websites, not to mention damages to the facility.

It’s interesting to note, however, that Authorize.net seemed to only have one single point of weakness where it could be damaged, and it seems but one attack vector can be responsible for bringing the processing system down. Redundancy seems not to have been the case at Authorize.net.