Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Shoutitout tops Google owned Jaiku


Jaiku the used to be popular Sweden based Google owned Twitter rip off has just been passed by yet another site with similar features but its own approach, Shoutitout according to Compete web analytics got more traffic last month than Jaiku by a decent amount.
now you are probably wondering why Friendfeed is also on this chart. It is showing a site that they will have to pass soon do to its decline and there increase. We also realized we forgot Cliqset in this chart. Shoutitout is not even close to passing Jaiku in updates because Jaiku launched shortly after Twitter back in 2006 so it has had allot more time to get Shouts than other networks.

Twitpic blocks Posterous and bring on the lawyers


Well that didn’t take long. Halfway into their big 15 importers in 15 days campaign, Posteroushas managed to make one of their competitors very angry. Twitpic is so angry, in fact, that they’re blocking the service and threatening legal action.

This morning, Posterous introduced their new “Rescue your photos from TwitPic” tool — a one-click way to import your photos from Twitpic over to your Posterous blog. This is the same type of importer Posterous has already made for Ning, Vox, Tumblr and a host of other services — as I said, they’re about halfway through the 15 of these tools they intend to make.

The idea, of course, is that if they make it easy enough to get your existing content on to Posterous, they think you’ll like their service so much that you’ll permanently switch. Twitpic, doesn’t like that idea one bit.

According to Posterous, Twitpic had some idea such a tool might be coming and sent a letter last Thursday threatening to sue the company if they launched it. “Their claims are completely bogus,” Posterous co-founder Sachin Agarwal tells us. “Posterous is simply acting as an agent to the user who owns the photos. We authenticate the user’s Twitter credentials and then download the images on their behalf,” he continues.

“Our lawyer sent a response to TwitPic this morning indicating that we aren’t breaking any laws here, but simply giving users a way to access their own photos and then decide which service they like best. Nevertheless, TwitPic banned our servers within a couple hours of the importer launch,” Agarwal says.

Twitpic has since responded to that letter from Posterous. We’ve had a chance to see them all. Twitpic seems most concerned about Posterous’ methods for accessing this data. The user privacy issue is brought up a number of times — and they also wonder if Posterous isn’t access Twitpic “trade secrets” with this importer.

“We are simply using their public RSS feed to pull images on the user’s behalf. There are no privacy violations here,” Agarwal says.

Twitpic says they’re not going to stop users from exporting their data, but prefer users do so manually, rather than with the use of this tool. Of course, if this really is just pulling the pictures through users’ RSS feeds, it’s hard to argue that this tool is anymore more than useful for people who are looking to switch. Plenty of other blogging sites offer similar import tools.

Amazon has been robbed


You often hear about Amazon Web Services having some downtime issues, but it’s rare to see Amazon.com itself have major issues. In fact, I can’t ever remember it happening the past couple of years. But that’s very much the case today as for the past couple of hours the service has been switching back and forth between being totally down and being up, but showing no products.

Obviously, Twitter is abuzz about this — though there’s no word from Amazon on Twitter yet about the downtime. Amazon Web Services, meanwhile, all seem to be a go, according to their dashboard. The mobile apps on the iPhone, iPad and Android devices are sort of working, but it doesn’t appear you can go to actual product pages.

Cloning is lame, Google should do it anyway

Small companies clone big companies all the time. And by clone I don’t just mean steal a basic idea. I mean clone almost literally – they just plain rip off every single feature and hope for the best. It certainly saves time on user testing.

Big companies, particularly big tech companies, don’t do this as much. Pride and ethics come into play at an individual and team level. Pure copying just isn’t how things are done.

Instead they tweak a little here, add a little there, and launch it as a variation of the original. That’s evolution, not stealing.

And most of the time it doesn’t work very well. Facebook’s users just don’t seem to want to behave like Twitter users, for example, no matter how hard Facebook tried to get them to change. And Google Buzz, besides the privacy snafus in the beginning, is just a little too complicated to get people using it wildly. Plus, I’m not convinced that people want all that junk in their email inbox.

But pure clones work well. Microsoft crushed Netscape in the 90s by simply building their own web browser and giving it away for free. Webmail and instant messaging services across Microsoft, Yahoo, Google and AOL are all largely the same, and that market is fragmented among all of those companies. If there’s a better way to do mail and messaging, no one has figured it out yet and gotten all the users to switch to them.

And that’s why it’s time for Google to just plane clone Facebook. Enough with the fancy pants Google Buzz Twitter-Facebook-Yelp killer. They need to raise the white flag and just copy Facebook right down to the details. Otherwise the war is over before Google even got to the battlefield.

So I’m not surprised to see that Google appears to be working on exactly that – a new social network that isn’t Orkut and isn’t Buzz but that will be 100% focused on being as good as or better than Facebook.

Why do they need to do this? Google is, after all, firing on all cylinders. Google continues to grow fast and has $24 billion a year in revenue. They dominate search marketing, possibly the most profitable business in the history of our species if you don’t include taxes, drugs or prostitution. Facebook has a long way to go to catch up.

Or do they? Facebook’s self serve ad business is exploding, say our sources, and may be significantly more robust than even the most favorable third party forecasts predict. Google let’s self serve users target ads based on search queries, and that works extremely well. But Facebook knows much, much more about its users than Google does, and allows self serve ads targeted to extremely relevant and timely user information. And with Facebook’s strategy of organizing the Internet through Facebook Platform has created a big open door for them to later insert ads on those sites, too. Facebook could be challenging Google’s revenue lead much sooner than people think. It’s not outrageous to think that the two companies could be in a dead heat by 2015, for example. See The Age Of Facebook for more of my thoughts on the rise of Facebook and why I think they’ll dominate the next decade.

Facebook is already bigger than Google in many ways. Not in total unique visitors per month – Facebook’s 550 million is still a lot less than Google’s 900 million. But Facebook has more page views: 250 billion v. 165 billion per month. And total minutes spent on Facebook is more than 2x Google: 150 billion v. 73 billion. (All stats are Comscore worldwide, May 2010).

Google needs a horse in the social networking race to be able to defend itself against Facebook over the long run. And the only way they’re going to be able to compete effectively is to just clone the darn thing. Original? No. Honorable? nope. But people have very short memories, sadly, and it’ll all blow over shortly.

There is one area where Google can gain a quick advantage – in truly open data with simple export tools and easy to understand privacy settings. I’d recommend going with the Twitter model on privacy – it’s all public or it’s all private (for approved friends only). It’s not hard to understand, and very few people actually choose the private option.

What Google shouldn’t do – must not do – is try to tie the service to other Google products for the wrong reasons. Microsoft’s web properties are constantly hobbled by the strategic decisions of a parent company that must protect an aging Windows and Office revenue stream, for example. Google must avoid that pitfall. And Facebook’s Twitter experiments, as well as Google bolting Buzz onto Gmail, show that users don’t like having the fundamental way they use products change very much. They need to flock to Google Me, or whatever it’s called, simply because they like the service.

This will be the great battle in consumer Internet over the next few years if Google does it right. And while I don’t like seeing clones, there’s really no other choice for Google. And at least the users will win – one thing Facebook needs right now is a little competition.

ps – Next up would be the Google Twitter clone. An exact copy, except with an open protocol that would let anyone run the service on their own server. They should call it Glitter.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Cliqset goes down for just about the first time in pretty much forever


Cliqset is getting bigger and closing in on Friendfeed to take over gathering posts from other network on to one extremely fast, and now, its down. Cliqset is currently giving visitors the 500 error with a man with a cell phone in his had (the Cliqset fail whale). This issue came up a few minutes ago and has been down since, we aren't sure what the problem is yet and the Twitter stream is yet to have complaints but we will keep you updated. Is this a local thing or national thing or an entire outage? Is Cliqset down for you to? If so please comment below.

Jibjab rolling in 1 million transactions a year




Online humor site JibJab, which is behind ElfYourself and loads of other zany videos has hit a big milestone: it’s now processing one million paid transactions per year. That’s big news for the company, which pivoted in late 2007 from an ad-supported business to one that generates revenue primarily through premium services and downloads.
JibJab earns money through a few channels. First, it offers a premium membership for $12/year that gives members access to its full range of customizable “Starring You” videos, which let you insert your friends’ faces into funny video clips like the site’s amazing take on the original Star Wars Trilogy . Membership also gives you access to all Ecards and ‘Everyday Fun’ messages. Unpaid users have access to some of this content, but much of it is reserved for premium members.
If users want to download their custom videos they can do that too for a few dollars (premium members get a discount on downloaded goods). Finally, the site also sells physical goods emblazoned with photos of you and your friends.

CEO Gregg Spiridellis declined to break down how many transactions each of these revenue streams accounted for, but he did say that the site is seeing 2x growth in terms of premium transactions since last year. You can see Spiridellis talk more about this in the interview above. JibJab has raised $16.9 million since 2006.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Shoutitout hits 500,000 Shouts actually 625,000


Shoutitout has hit 500,000 Shouts as of tonight. It actually has more around 6250,000 but we didn't notice it till now. Shoutitout is adding so many Shouts because of the "Shoutitout all nighter" an annual event were users are supposed to stay up from 7AMPST to 3AMPST. We aren't sure what the 500,000 Shout was because Shoutitout doesn't use the system were numbers are the Shout. We are guessing it was around 2 hours ago but if Shoutitout gangs that much that quickly maybe they can reach 1,000,000 by there birthday, August 28th, which is there current goal. Good luck guys!

Trust us there isn't and iPhone 4 recall


The Daily Mail reported this morning than an iPhone 4 recall is underway, but don’t believe it; the UK publication’s source was a tweet from a fake Steve Jobs Twitter account. Apple hasn’t announced any plans to recall its new phone.

The Twitter account @ceoSteveJobs is a parody account — it even says so in the profile bio, and even if you don’t read the bio, it should have been obvious from the tweets, which include lines like “Be careful not to leave your #iPhone4 at the Genius Bar on the way out of the store. Gizmodo might pick it up,” and “I heard the CEO of AT&T got married recently. The service was great but the reception was terrible.”

The Daily Mail has pulled the original story, which began with a claim that a recall was coming and a quote from the fake Twitter account, and then continued to explain the issues users have had with signal loss when the iPhone 4 is held a certain way.

It’s hard to imagine that Apple didn’t know about the signal issue. The engineers at the company probably decided it was a worthwhile trade-off for otherwise improved reception, so don’t expect a recall for that reason.

Though you might surprised that The Daily Mail ran a story based on a tweet from an account that is so obviously fake, it’s not the first time something like this has happened. That’s why Twitter implemented a system for verifying the accounts of important people and publications.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Duckduckgo adds holidays


Duckduckgo one of my favorite search engines has rolled out yet another feature, holidays. You can now find out which day a holiday is on that year threw a 3rd party source but all you should need to know is on the Duckduckgo search. The example they gave was Labor day which isn't the most popular holiday as most of you know. Duckduckgo has a long list of social networks you can search with there feature called Duckdcuk !Band, here is a list of sites that works on and what to type in on the search to get there results. (we aren't listing all of those in the tags)
!43things
!abcnews
!about
!accuweather
!acronyms (!acro)
!activestate
!adobe
!ajc
!alexa
!alistapart
!allexperts
!allposters
!allrecipes
!amazon
!android
!answers
!ap
!appengine
!apple
!appledev
!arstechnica
!as3
!ask
!asn
!aur
!baidu
!bang
!bartlets
!bbc
!bestbuy
!bible
!biblegateway
!bimages
!bing
!binsearch
!bioagraphy
!bitbucket
!blogs
!bloomberg
!boingboing
!bookfinder
!boost
!britannica
!btjunkie
!businessweek
!buy
!cache
!capost
!careerbuilder
!cartoonnetwork
!cbsnews
!cbssports
!cc
!cean
!cheatcc
!cheatcodes
!chicagotribune
!chords
!circuitcity
!clipart
!clusty
!cnbc
!cnet
!cnn
!code
!compete
!concerts
!costco
!coupons
!cpan
!cpp
!crunchbase
!crunchyroll
!csmonitor
!cspan
!ctan
!d
!dailymotion
!define
!delicious
!dell
!deviantart
!dhl
!dictionary
!dig (!host)
!digg
!digikey
!digitalspy
!discovery
!disney
!distro
!distrowatch
!django
!dns
!domain
!dotnet (!.net)
!dpackages
!drupal
!drupalapi (!dapi)
!ebay
!economist
!encyclopedia
!engadget
!entrez
!epinions
!espn
!etymology
!eventful
!expedia
!facebook (!fb)
!fark
!fedex
!flex
!flickr
!fool
!forbes
!fotolog
!foxnews
!fports
!freshmeat
!friendster
!ft
!gamecheats
!gamefaqs
!gamepro
!gamespot
!gamesradar
!gawker
!gblogs
!gbooks (!gb)
!gdocs (!gd)
!gettyimages
!gfinance (!gf)
!ggroups (!gg)
!gigaom
!gimages (!gi)
!github
!gizmodo
!globeandmail
!gmail
!gmaps (!gm)
!gnews (!gn)
!greader (!gr)
!godaddy
!google (!g)
!googleuk (!guk)
!gorp
!gphotos (!gp)
!gscholar
!gshopping (!gs)
!gtranslate (!gt)
!guardian
!gvideos (!gv)
!hackage
!hi5
!hoogle
!howstuffworks
!howthingswork
!hp
!huffingtonpost
!ibm
!icons
!ign
!ikea
!images
!imdb
!imeem
!ipernity
!irs
!iso
!isohunt
!istockphoto
!jcpenny
!jdk
!jobs
!jquery
!lastfm
!latimes
!launchpad
!leo
!lenovo
!lifehacker
!lisp
!loc
!local
!lyrics!macys
!man
!map
!mashable
!mercurynews
!metacritic
!metafilter
!metrolyrics
!microsoft (!ms)
!miniclip
!mlb
!monster
!mootools (!moo)
!mouser
!mp3
!msdn
!msmvps
!msnbc
!mtv
!myspace
!mysql
!nationalgeographic
!nba
!nciku
!netflix
!netgear
!newegg
!news
!newsday
!newsmax
!newsnow
!newsvine
!newsweek
!newyorker
!nfl
!nhl
!npr
!nvidia
!nypost
!nyt
!nzbmatrix (!nzb)
!octopart
!oracle
!orkut
!overstock
!parashift
!parking
!pbs
!pdf
!perezhilton
!perfspot
!perldoc
!permonks
!photobucket
!php
!pictures
!ping
!podcast
!pollstar
!port
!posters
!postgresql
!price
!pricegrabber
!proxy
!pubmed
!pylons
!pypi
!python
!quantcast
!quotes
!rails
!rbl
!rdns
!readwriteweb
!recipies
!reddit
!redtram
!reuters
!rfc
!rhyme
!ringtones
!rottentomatoes (!rt)
!ruby
!rubydoc
!rubygems
!salon
!sas
!sba
!scholar
!scribd
!searchyc (!newsyc !hn)
!sec
!serverfault (!sf)
!sfgate
!shareware
!shopzilla
!showtimes
!shuttershock
!si
!skeemr
!skyrock
!slashdot (!/.)
!slate
!slideshare
!smh
!software
!sourceforge
!sqlalchemy
!stackoverflow (!so)
!startribune
!stockphotos
!stubhub
!summitpost
!suntimes
!superuser (!su)
!synonyms
!tabs
!target
!techcrunch
!techdirt
!technet
!texture
!thenation
!theonion
!thesaurus
!thestar
!thumbplay
!ticketmaster
!tickets
!tinyurl
!tmdb
!tmz
!tnt
!tomshardware
!tones
!torrentz
!torrent
!traceroute
!traffic
!translate
!tripadvisor
!truveo
!tv
!tvguide
!twitter (!tw)
!upackages
!upcoming
!ups
!urbandictionary
!usa
!usatoday
!usps
!valleywag
!veoh
!versiontracker
!video
!w3c
!w3schools
!wallpaper
!walmart
!walpha (!wa !wolfram)
!washingtonpost
!wayback (!archive)
!weather
!weatherbug
!webmd
!whatis
!whois
!wikipedia (!w !wiki)
!wink
!wired
!wordreference
!wsj
!wunderground
!xanga
!yahoo
!yelp
!yimages
!youtube
!yui
!zdnet

Friday, June 25, 2010

Dear Twitter, IM NOT JAPANESES!


Im not sure what is currently up with Twitter but for some reason on the Twitter homepage were the Trending topics scroll bar is, well the words that are supposed to say "Trending" say 人気のトピック which is "Popular topics" in Japaneses. There is now acknowledgement to this on there status blog and yes I checked my language it is in English and so is the rest of the site just this one word popping up in Japaneses. Anyone ells having this problem? If so comment below and share!

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Pingdom the uptime support site is down!


Pingdom, a site that monitors other sites uptime including some high profile sites like Twitter, Foursquare, and Uhhmm is currently down. The site has had no comment on its Twitter or blog about the issues we don't think they have noticed it. We have emailed them asking for information about the downtime and will update you when we get it. This is a major confidence killer, thus a site that tells you if your site is down, is down. As far as we can tell the Desktop app is up and running but it may just be staying on the same result as it was when the site went down. There is no word on the alerts threw SMS and email about your site being down so we can only guess they are down to.

Youtube to live steam Twilight Eclipse premier


You tube is going to allow Twilight to live stream the Eclipse premier on there channel on Youtube. The stream is at 5:30 Pacific time 8:30 Eastern. The news broke out that Youtube might add the ability for everyone to stream videos live on Youtube, which they have not done yet. They have however started letting channels such as Twilights, Citizentubes and some other channels stream on there channel. So go send Youtube and email and comment below if you want Youtube to let ALL users stream!

Porn sites to get .XXX domain name


ICANN, the organization that oversees domain names and registrations for the Internet, plans to approve the .xxx top-level domain (TLD) for adult websites.

According to multiple reports, ICANN officials told people at a public meeting in Brussels that it intends to allow adult businesses to register .xxx domains, which have been the subject of controversy for several years. An ICANN attorney said that due diligence and contract negotiations must still be carried out; if those are successful, Internet porn could have its own distinct TLD.

The .xxx domain has been criticized by everyone from pornographers — some of whom see the TLD as a form of digital segregation — to conservative American activists, who would probably prefer a porn-free Internet altogether.

This development has been spearheaded by the ICM Registry, who could end up selling .xxx domains as soon as this year if ICANN negotiations go smoothly. ICM states on its website that the idea of the .xxx domain is that responsible pornographers will be able to self-identify and web users will more easily be able to identify adult content online.

There is no indication that the .xxx domain would be mandatory for all or any adult websites, however.

Here’s a recent video interview about the domain and surrounding issues:

Uhhmmmail hits 1 million registered emails


Uhhmmmail the somewhat new free email address owned by Uhhmm the search engine has hit an amazing 1 million registered emails! The site launched back in February and exploded during the Chile earthquake disaster. They then slowly grew and now have 1,000,000 registered emails. The site according to the email they sent us averages 18 emails a seconds, we did the math, thats 1382400 emails sent a day. Users receive about twice that much and only about 20 percent of that is spam. They also said that they had there recent first email that was a marriage proposal, and that they had a acquisition completed threw there email service. Uhhmm plans to roll allot more time and money into Uhhmmmail from now on out.

FTC bans Twitter from misleading users about security for 20 years


Today, the FTC settled a lengthy investigation into Twitter’s lax security practices and protection of user accounts after two high-profile hacking incidents in 2009. The first one, which occurred in January, 2009, compromised 35 high-profile accounts, including those of President Barack Obama, Bill O’Reilly, Britney Spears, the Huffington Post, and Facebook. According to the FTC:

One tweet was sent from the account of then-President-elect Barack Obama, offering his more than 150,000 followers a chance to win $500 in free gasoline.

The other attack occurred in April, 2009, and involved a hacker gaining access to a Twitter employee’s email account which stored the employee’s administrative password. The hacker in question was the Frenchman who goes by the handle Hacker Croll. (Later, this was the same hacker who sent us confidential Twitter documents, but that incident was not part of the FTC investigation).

The FTC’s concern in the matter is the ability of hackers to breach Twitter’s password system and gain access to user accounts. According to the FTC:

Under the terms of the settlement, Twitter will be barred for 20 years from misleading consumers about the extent to which it maintains and protects the security, privacy, and confidentiality of nonpublic consumer information, including the measures it takes to prevent authorized access to information and honor the privacy choices made by consumers. The company also must establish and maintain a comprehensive information security program, which will be assessed by a third party every other year for 10 years.

The FTC provides a list of security measures Twitter failed to have in place, which Twitter says were implemented subsequent to the attacks. It may sound silly to bar Twitter from “misleading consumers” for 20 years, but that is essentially the life of the order and gives the FTC the ability to fine Twitter for future security breaches to the tune of $16,000 per incident. Without this order and the settlement, the FTC does not have what is known as civil penalty authority.

A source at the FTC tells me that the agency is “closely watching social media for information at risk.” Compromised social networks are increasingly becoming a way for fraudsters to reach and trick consumers. Twitter is on notice now, and so are other social networks, that they must do everything they can to protect user’s accounts from security breaches.

Twitpic integrates Twitter places


Today Twitpic released Twitter Places integration following Twitter’s recent launch of the feature. Now geotagged photos will be grouped and Twitpics will be searchable by location. In addition, users can view a history of places they’ve been.

Earlier today Twitpic’s Noah Everett tweeted about the new feature by linking to a collection of photos grouped by location from Charleston, South Carolina. The photos are grouped based on the geolocation data pulled in from the Twitter Places API.

Of course, Twitpic’s Twitter Places support is limited to its own web interface for photo uploads and other third-party apps with Twitter Places integration. This means that, at least for now, the number of photos grouped by place is minimal.

In testing we did noticed that the Places search functionality doesn’t appear to be working as intended, although this could have something to do with the scarcity of geotagged photos.

Twitpic’s Twitter Places integration follows the addition of Photo Events and Face Tagging, which have been released in recent weeks. When coupled together, the Twitpic improvements make for a much-enhanced Twitter photo sharing and saving experience.

Shoutitout your killing us


Shoutitout is down again for over capacity. So many sites have had issues because of capacity recently that we are pretty much only posting about that so we are considering launching a site down blog that is only about sites going down. What do you think about this idea? Give us a comment below! Now for the Shoutitout story. It has been down for a few minutes and is completely down.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Mashable ups the ainty adds a BIG Facebook like button.


Mashable the arguably biggest tech blog on the internet has upgraded the option to like its posts threw Facebook. They have also gotten rid of the Google Buzz button which in a way is a surprise because they talked so much about it. They have driven more attention to there Digg button, which they have been bashing a bit recently, they also still have that retweet button and a share of Facebook button which I think is were the Google Buzz button should be or heck, put a Shoutitout button there. They also like almost every blog have a button that allows you to share threw email. Then there is that huge Like button as shown above. So do you plan to add a similar button to your blog or site or are you going to stick to what you already have added? Let us know in the comments below!

Youtube hates you to... adds a Vuvuzela button



Some time in the last hour, YouTube activated a new button on some videos that looks like a tiny soccer ball. Clicking it will activate an endless, incredibly annoying sound that sounds vaguely like a swarm of insects. Or, for anyone who has been watching the World Cup, like the dreaded Vuvuzela — an instrument commonly used in South Africa at football (soccer) games. South Africa is, of course, the host country for this year’s World Cup, and fans watching the games have been subjected to the vuvuzela’s drone for hours on end.

I’m not seeing the button show up on all videos, but it is definitely appearing on some clips that aren’t soccer related. Here’s one that has it.

Shoutitout down


We aren't sure if it is because of the world cup but Shoutitout is currently down, down, down. It is showing the same error message as it did last time it was down. We have contacted Shoutitout and will update you when we have more information.

Twitter friend look up has already been blocked by Facebook


Well this is interesting. No sooner do we post about Twitter’s new ability to look up friends on Facebook, does Facebook block the app. It’s not yet clear if this block is intentional or if it was simply getting hit too quickly and they automatically pulled the plug.

Either way, the message reads:

Oops, couldn’t find anyone here…yet.
An error has occurred because Facebook has blocked your ability to allow this application to look up your friends. Twitter has requested that Facebook remove the block.

Twitter is in the process of finding out what is going on. And we have an inquiry into Facebook. Obviously, we’ll update when we know more.

Twitter and Facebook have had an interesting/contentious relationship over the years. Facebook tried to acquired the company in late 2008, and when that failed, Facebook features mysteriously started to look more like Twitter. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently admitted he was too focused on Twitter in the past when he saw their fast growth.

Facebook was also hugely underreporting the number of users using the Twitter app until very recently. The Twitter app on Facebook is a top 40 app.

Update from Twitter: “The Facebook app cannot currently access your Facebook friend list. We believe this is an issue on Facebook’s end.”

Update from Facebook (a few hours later): “We are working with Twitter resolve the issue.”

So it doesn’t appear that Facebook is blocking this intentionally.

Twitter has announced that it is launching major upgrades to its Facebook and LinkedIn applications, bringing added functionality and integration between Twitter and two of the world’s largest social networks.

The new Twitter app for Facebook, which is now available here, not only allows you to syndicate your tweets to the world’s largest social network, but now has a feature that allow users to see which of their Facebook friends are also on Twitter and choose which ones they want to follow.

The new feature could be huge: it brings existing Facebook connections into the Twitterverse, which is likely to spur new levels of engagement and growth. We’ve already seen a fail whale or two in our testing of the new Facebook app though, making us worry that the new feature could potentially cause more downtime.

The microblogging startup is also announcing updates to Tweets, LinkedIn’s Twitter application. LinkedIn beefed up its Twitter integration last month. It also includes a feature that lets you see which of your LinkedIn connections you follow and automatically follow the ones that you don’t.

Youtube-Viacom lawsuit is over, the winner is...... Youtube


The billion dollar YouTube-Viacom case has finally been resolved, and the winner is … YouTube. In a statement published to its company blog this afternoon, YouTube writes, “the court granted our motion for summary judgment in Viacom’s lawsuit with YouTube. This means that the court has decided that YouTube is protected by the safe harbor of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) against claims of copyright infringement.”

Viacom — in its lawsuit originally filed in 2007 — had claimed that YouTube deliberately infringed on its copyrights and knowingly allowed offending content to remain on its site.

The past few months have seen some intriguing back and forth between the two companies as documents were unsealed. For starters, Viacom detailed communication between Google and YouTube executives that at times appear to show little regard for copyright content. Meanwhile, YouTube accused Viacom of underwriting secret programs that actually placed its content on YouTube but made it impossible for the video giant to enforce copyright.

YouTube goes on to say in their statement that, “This is an important victory not just for us, but also for the billions of people around the world who use the web to communicate and share experiences with each other.” Of course, Viacom could quickly appeal the ruling, and this case could be dragged out for several more years. Stay tuned.

Fifa world cup causing major internet issues

The Fifa world cup has pretty much shut the internet down. Currently Twitter, Yahoo! Sports, Shoutitout, Tumblr, and other smaller sites are either down or running extremely slow. The earlier USA goal started the problems on Yahoo! sports which was completely down, and Twitter was showing almost 100% fail whales, though both services are up I still get a fail whale here and there and Yahoo! Sports is slow to let you comment. Shoutitout lets you update but sometimes you have to refresh and try again 4 or 5 times before the Shout posts or click the Shout button servral times and it will eventually add 2 or more posts. Tumblr is off and on in site uptime and is extremely slow when it is up. But, you gotta update the world about something the whole world is watching anyway so keep Tweeting, Shouting, commenting, Tumblring? even if it is making those sites not work!

USA VS Algeria may set an internet traffic record


The dramatic ending to the World Cup match between the USA and Algeria could set a new record for Internet traffic.

We’ve been watching Akamai’s Net Usage Index, which tracks visitors per minute on more than 100 of the major news sites in Akamai’s network. In the minutes following Landon Donovan’s game winning goal in the 91st minute of action (which sent the U.S. to the round of 16), traffic spiked to 11.2 million visitors per minute, which moves the event past the 2008 presidential election as the second highest traffic spike of all-time.

Today’s number was also likely pushed significantly higher because England and Slovenia were also playing a suspenseful World Cup match at the same time. The plethora of World Cup breaking news briefly knocked Yahoo Sports offline and also caused issues at Twitter –- though the latter has been somewhat of a regular occurrence during the World Cup (on a related note, tweets containing “USA” spiked to 6% of total tweet volume).

The overall traffic record was set earlier this month during the first day of World Cup action, where traffic exceeded 12 million visitors per minute. We’ll wait and see what the final numbers are from Akamai, but for the moment, it looks like Donovan’s goal will go down in Internet history at least as a solid number two.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Firefox no longer crashes Adobe


After some delays, Mozilla has released Firefox 3.6.4, the newest version of the popular web browser. It comes with one big addition: protection against crashing due to third-party plugins, most notably Adobe Flash.

The updated browser, which you can download here, comes with dozens of bug fixes and stability upgrades. What the average user will care about most though is Firefox crash protection, something that is a prominent feature of Google Chrome.

Crash protection utilizes out-of-process plugins technology to run third-party plugins (specifically Flash, Quicktime, and Silverlight) in a separate process. In the past, a plugin crash would take down your entire Firefox browser. With crash protection however, “the browser will stay running while the portions of websites controlled by the plugin will be disabled.” It only takes a refresh to restart the plugin.

There is a catch, though: only Windows and Linux users have access to crash protection. According to Mozilla, making crash protection available to Mac OS X users would require major changes to Firefox’s infrastructure. However, the non-profit promises that it will become available for Mac users in Firefox 4, which should ship by the end of the year.

Server issues continue to plague the internet


After Twitters recent announcement that the issues will continue they have done just that as you can see in Twitters status blog, however a site that didn't tell us it would have server and capacity issues is Shoutitout. Shoutitout has been running extremly slow the last few days, there search doesn't work right now and mobile posts aren't going threw. We have email Shoutitout asking what is causing these issues but they are yet to respond. We will keep you updated on this story!

Twitter is down but Down For Everyone or Just Me disagrees


Twitter is currently displaying the fail whale which would normal on downforeveryoneorjustme.com show that http://twitter.com is down, However, this time it is saying Twitter is up and its just me. I know its not just me because I tried it on 5 other computers and got the same result, but why is it showing that Twitter isn't currently down? I'm not sure if Down For Everyone Or Just Me is getting random lucky working from Twitter or they aren't actually checking or whats going on. Anyone have any information? If so comment below please!

Monday, June 21, 2010

Bing to donate up tp 100k more dollars to gulf charity

Bing who has already gone threw the Colbert Report (video below) to promote them selfs in echange to donate 100,000$ to a charity set up by Stephan Colbert has done it again. They are now starting a Retweet campaign every retweet=10$ up to 100,000$ with the hashtag #BingforGulf. This has been endorsed by Twitter so it is an official Twitter sponsored campaign and will increase Bing popularity even more. We don't know how many times Bing plans on doing this but we have emailed them asking for details about it.

Retweet this & @Bing will donate $10 to @CNN's Gulf Telethon up to $100K. More at http://bit.ly/howtodonate. #BingforGulf

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Charity Begins at 11:30
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorFox News

Shoutitout launches there own world cup (2 pts for us)!


Shoutitout has launched there own version of the world cup. The rules are Shout: 1 Point Recruit a member: 5 Points Shout threw API: 2 Points. Here are the teams:
@willy (Team Shoutie)
@willy
@genie
@hotmusic
@teenspace
@donduck
@big_fat_kat
@sarah
@RickyFlare
@microfield
@Asshu
@jonathanawilliams
@harrisonpreddy
@fifa
@hellotxt

@mat (Team Subs)
@mat
@FudgeFactory
@ilijabrajkovic
@uhhmmnews
@louwrensoberholzer
@lmfaoshout
@Mak
@Brother
@user731909076
@shoutcinary
@user125934
@k8e
@saazz
@tweetie

@emily (Team SIO)
@emily
@roxana
@e4veedub
@noaht
@Clicktakeapic
@shoutcount
@Resolutionsupporter
@kouamouo
@user722790
@euwynpoon
@swazzer
@george
@pingfm
@twhirl

@ashton (Team Badge)
@ashton
@Victoria
@uhhmm
@yoyo
@quack
@mary
@newyears
@wordupmag
@pinkinly
@lelakiindonesia
@rebecca
@willyacefanpage
@twitterfeed
@dodgeball

GO OUR TEAM! Go join this site and say thanks for showing me this site @uhhmmnews please!

Stumbleupon grabs 2 x-Google employees


Discovery engine startup StumbleUpon today announced it has hired two new directors to expand its sales and partnership teams, both previous Google employees.

Anthony Napolitano, a former key member of the sales teams for several of Google’s products, including TV Ads, Analytics, Checkout and AdWords, will be joining the company as Director of Sales.

Oliver Hsiang, until recently manager of strategic partner development at Google and former product manager at Yahoo, Microsoft and Chipshot, is StumbleUpon’s new Director of Strategic Partnerships.

In a press release, StumbleUpon founder and CEO Garrett Camp boasts about the double steal from Google and says the company has hired 15 new team members in the last three months alone.

Looks like StumbleUpon is faring well after about a year after its spin-off from eBay – the ‘social search engine’ company recently also reached 10 million registered users.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Linkedin hits 70 million users


Professional social network LinkedIn now has 70 million members, according to the company’s home page. The company hit 60 million users in February, and has been growing fast, especially in international markets. LinkedIn’s network’s CEO, Jeff Weiner, stated in a blog post last fall that half of LinkedIn’s membership is international. The company is also listing one million company profiles, which are similar to a user profile.

Weiner tells us that the fastest growth LinkedIn is seeing is in international markets.
LinkedIn has mitigated the growth in international markets with expansion in international offices in The Netherlands, and India, two areas where LinkedIn is growing rapidly.

The network has also been adding features continuously over the past six months to broaden LinkedIn’s reach across the web, adding a deeper Twitter integration, opening up an API, providing a plugin with Microsoft Outlook and enhancing sharing options.

But while LinkedIn is looking to bring its platform to the greater web, there’s a tremendous amount of potential to use the data the network has on its side to add additional functionality to both users and companies. Weiner recently told us that data is incredibly important part of LinkedIn’s future as a network. And while we can’t reveal what those data features are at the moment, it’s safe to say that we will be seeing a number of new initiatives coming from LinkedIn leveraging the wealth of professional content on the network.

Weiner won’t comment on any plans for LinkedIn to IPO in the near future, but the company is clearly seeing growth, is profitable and working diligently to build features into the platform. It should be interesting to see what the second half of 2010 brings the professional social network.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Is Twitter going to steal another Facebook and Shoutitout idea?


There’s no question that Twitter’s web experience has been improving pretty rapidly over the past several months. However, one area that’s still lacking is a good way to view conversations. Clicking on the “in reply to” links is tedious for long conversations. Several third-party apps (including Twitter’s own native iPhone app — which they bought) are much better at doing this. One of those is an app called Twitoaster. And its creator just got hired by Twitter.

Twitoaster is the work of French developer Arnaud Meunier. As he tweeted and blogged today, he’s going to work for Twitter after getting to know some of the team following the Chirp conference in April. Of note, Twitoaster’s speciality was the threaded conversation view it gave to tweets.

So does that mean this is coming to Twitter? Not necessarily — Twitoaster eventually added a number of other features — such as analytics — that could point to how Twitter could use Meunier’s skills as well. But given the direction Twitter has been going with its web product, I would be surprised if some sort of better conversation view wasn’t added to the site relatively soon.

Another key focus of Twitoaster is tweet archiving. That’s another feature Twitter could definitely improve upon. Currently, thanks to Twitter’s search limitations, once a tweet is a couple of months old, it’s basically lost in the Twitter.com ether. If Twitter had a better archiving mechanism for old tweets, it could extend the life of them, and make them much more useful.

All of this, of course, is some fun late Friday afternoon speculation. But Twitter was clearly impressed with what Meunier built, and I wouldn’t be surprised if they use his skills in a similar fashion on their core product.

Meanwhile, Twitoaster will live on, but Meunier says not to expect any new features as he’ll be focused on his new job.

New Digg clone launches. Nicer than Digg


A new Digg clone called Swrrl has launched its an amazing site. Its just like Digg but faster and easier to use. It lets you post "Stories" and then "Swrrl" them up or declare them not for you. The site is created by 16 year old Chris Moon who we haven't heard of before but we know he lives somewhere in California. The site has not announced how its going to earn money or if it is going to just stay how it is. We will update you when we get a response from its CEO.

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