-
Website
http://www.scobleizer.com/ -
Original page
http://scobleizer.com/2007/10/31/naked-conversations-20-how-google-is-disrupting-the-social-media-starfish/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
danja
44 comments · 4 points
-
polizeros
52 comments · 1 points
-
AndyBeard
69 comments · 4 points
-
Zachary Adam Cohen
35 comments · 8 points
-
dbarefoot
40 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
2 weeks ago · 181 comments
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
3 days ago · 24 comments
-
2010: the year SEO isn’t important anymore
1 week ago · 67 comments
-
iPhone developers abandoning app model for HTML5?
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
A new addition here: the Meebo bar
2 days ago · 8 comments
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
The videos!
Thanks for the summary of points in text.
--Gib
One thought - all this starfish and no mention of Second Life?
Facebook for Self-Promoters.
I think we may see a freemium service for Facebook that unlocks special features.
Also, they should come out and play on Open Social!
- all the social bookmarking(-sites),
- commenting (co-comment anyone ?)
- social TV (Joost, babelgum etc)
- location/map based social tools (dodgeball, navizon buddyfinder etc)
- crowdsourcing (amazon mechanical turk etc)
- reviews and recommendations (yelp, angie's list)
- gaming (xbox live, playstation network, ea online)
- im (aim, instant messenger,...)
- web based events (webEx, genesys)
When you sign you name to something such as the "Open Social Web" Bill of rights, you should also defend the concept, trademark and all from being taken over by a single corporate entity.
Having the ability to own your data and move it from one site to another isn't the same concept as Google's platform which is all about Google having access to that data because all the services will be using the same API.
:)
http://www.kyte.tv/ch/18877-chomer-com/67784-on...
We'll see (hopefully) what Google has up its sleeve today!
I wasn't sure where exactly to leave my comment but hope it'll find it's way to the proper reader. I just finished reader Naked Conversations (probably later than most) and am excited about blogs and how they can help both my career and my business. I'm a newbie to say the least (my blog has been up for only a few months) but truly believe in the communications revolution coming about. What I wanted to bring up is the 'cultural' reasons some countries may be blogging more than others. On p.124 you speak about "Siestas in the Blogosphere' and it got my attention as my business is in Mexico (I have a SPanish and English blog. Not necessarily mirrored of course) and I see alot of potential here given that blogs have not really been embraced yet. When I brought up the cultural aspect with friends and colleagues here (all latin) several mentioned the 'fear factor'. The thought of publicly publishing your success, lifestyle ,and knowledge scared most of them in a very real way. In Mexico, as in other Latin countries, kidnapping rates are incredibly high and expressing your views is often considered life threatening. I didn't see this mentioned in your book but thought it might be an important point to consider when writing about blogs (or social media in general) and culture. Has anyone mentioned this before?