Posts Tagged ‘advertising’

In defence of the Ars Technica reader blockade

// March 8th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- “I’ll be odd person out”, says Christopher Parsons  in a Reader’s Write to yesterday’s post on the decision by Ars Technica to block readers who’d blocked the site’s advertisements. Calling it a test the tech site, started in 1998 by Ken Fisher, among others, ostracised readers who were ostracising its ads. Ars is a Conde Naste publication and like all publishers, it tends to become a little worried when its revenue shows signs of not being all it could be,  particularly during these economic hard times. If readers were blocking ads, all they saw was — nothing. “Ars screwed up that initial ‘test’, and they’ve owned that, repeatedly”, says Chris, a doctoral student at Victoria University on Vancouver Island in BC. “That said, they’re reliant on a 3rd party ad group because they’re with Conde Naste, and they usually have pretty reasonable ads for the site” he says, going on > > > Also, if you hate ads (I do) and find high value in their original content reporting (again, I do), pay them a $50/year or (as of next month) the monthly subscription to get rid of ads + some other perks. This is, I will point out, similar to what Jon is trying to do here, save that he hasn’t blocked content to people using ad blockers (something Ars recognized was a not-good move on their part). I’ve been in conversations with people complaining about everything from an extra few seconds load time (in FF, see a change in load from about 2sec with ABP to 5-6sec w/o ABP), ‘bad business models’, ‘bad content’, etc etc. There are a lot of strong writers with Ars, and Ars *isn’t* a personal site. It’s a professional news and content generation environment. Given the high number of technically inclined people who visit on a regular basis, one can expect that ABP is more heavily used by that audience than, say, the audience of CNN by percentages. They’re just asking those same people to think about the possible implications of enabling ABP for sites that they visit (Ars, in particular) on a regular basis. If you look at traffic patterns, Ars generates a *lot* of traffic. They’re not going to ‘win’ a fight with ad blockers, and I don’t think they want to. What they also don’t want to do is lay off additional employees, like they did last year. Good people were let go, and the people work like dogs to get articles out. The website is designed so that all ads load in iFrame – the content will load quickly regardless, though you may need to wait for a ‘full page load’ as they are forced to rely on 3rd party ad servers. There are a lot of places that do really, really terrible advertising and if you look at them I don’t think you can reasonably count Ars amongst them. They avoid garish ads, do target their ecosystem, and have options to pay to drop the advertising. This latter option is often pushed by people; ‘why not offer a model whereby if we toss you some cash, we don’t see ads’ (something, I will note, that comes up here on a regular basis when Jon notes he’s short on money) – if you value their content (and hence think their continued operation is important), then why not follow through on the last option? Note: none of this is meant as an ‘attack’ or anything of the sort. If you read any anger/annoyance in this comment, it’s frustration at what seems (to me!) to be a disconnect between valuing content, and recognizing that for the content to keep coming content producers need some kind of income, which often comes through advertising. I hate advertising, but if I need to suffer through it so a few favoured sites continue, then I’ll swallow my annoyance to let people like Jon and Ars capture a bit of revenue from my page impressions. Good arguments, but I’m not asking readers to keep p2pnet afloat through subscriptions — although I admit, it’d solve my problems if they did. Instead, I’m A) trying to develop offline sources of income to help keep the site (and me and my family ) going; and, B) talking to someone with decades of business experience about him turning p2pnet from a personal site with no consistent  means of support into a self-sustaining alternate news source. I also agree with Devil’s Advocate who comments : “There’s a shitload of reasons why an increasing number of people want to limit what is really a questionable, unsolicited 3rd-party connection. No matter how much you trust the site itself, you have no idea most of the time what 3rd parties are operating through it, and what those 3rd parties might be doing. And, though you may really like a site, you can’t excuse that site for any ‘bad behaviour’ its practices enable. “The bottom line is, they’re not suppose to be insisting, suggesting, implying, or even hinting that the users are wrong in protecting themselves.” Because, lest we forget,  readers aren’t  merely blocking intrusive advertising; more importantly, they’re also blocking companies, and there are many of them, which use their ads to scoop data about visitors for behavioural targeting  and  other dodgy purposes. As DA says in an earlier post , “You don’t ask for people to cooperate with your business model … you design your business model to harmonize with the people.” To do otherwise is to court disaster. Ask the entertainment industry. Stay tuned. Jon Newton - p2pnet - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi p2pnet - March, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Ars Technica blocks ad-blocking readers

// March 7th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- “I am embarrassed for P2PNet. It begs for money in public like a beggar on on a street street corner looking for hand outs. I see you have only managed to cheat your readers out of $13.01 this month. Does that not tell everything you need to know? What are your figures? 20,000, 30,000, 40,000 a month? You should do what yu keep promising to do and shut P2PNet down. People see it for what it is.” The comment above went up about 10 minutes after I posted the second ad on the right. And whoever wrote it seems to have been so upset s/he was stuttering —- “on on a street street”. Since s/he asked, and because it meshes in with an interesting email from Devil’s Advocate on the subject of metrics, in January, according to Awstats, of 244,010 visits to p2pnet, 140,622 were uniques. This time last year it was a lot more than that. But shit happens, as they say. Late in 2009, I moved from a host in the US to a host in Belgium. But because of a huge mix-up at Go Daddy, it took eight days to complete the transfer and during that time my Google rank plummeted from 6 out of 10 to zero, and my stats went down to 2,000 or 3,000 a day. I have no idea why the lost eight days had such a dramatic effect, but they did. By February the rank was back to 6 out of 10, and traffic is slowly re-building. One week into March, I’m averaging 6,230.71 uniques a day, says Awstats. Last month, the average was 7,799.18. Of ‘downward spirals’ If you’re consciously and deliberately communicating with other people, as I am, obviously, 100 visitors are better than 10. But to a lot of people, traffic counts don’t matter. They’re bloggers so they blog. To anyone who depends on the number of clicks  each advertisement  on the site produces, though, the amount of traffic isn’t only important, it’s vital —- although I wonder what it’s really worth to the advertisers. If 1,000 people click on an ad, what does it mean? Gargle, or someone like it, large or small, and the owners of the site carrying the ad get paid, and data used for creating databases and behavioural targeting are gathered. But how many of those clicks actually generate a hard sale, or even an inquiry? A couple of years ago, “Advertisers  believe it’s carved in stone we’ll continue to buy their ‘product,’ which increasingly looks the same, sounds the same, smells the same and tastes the same, no matter how they treat us”, I said in p2pnet , going on > > > But we’re not buying it, in any sense. The print and electronic media as they used to exist, and as they still exist in the eyes of most people who are in charge of them, aren’t merely in the doldrums: they’re dying. And it has nothing to do with the “weak U.S. economy”. The “downward spirals” and “tumbling advertising revenues” are due to the fact consumers are customers again, and discerning ones at that. The cheap tricks routinely used by the advertising, marketing and promotion industry just don’t work anymore. The Net is to blame. It’s having a major impact on traditional advertising and news delivery systems because as more and more men, women and children open online accounts, they’re increasingly becoming their own media providers on an individual and group basis. So who needs the heavily biased, often inaccurate, advertiser-controlled corporate press and their allied ’services,” as they are at the moment? Who? And how? “One thing I’ve never truly delved in was the way various ads generate revenue for a site”, says Devil’s Advocate in his email, going on > > > I always assumed that, in the simplest model, an advertiser paid a percentage based on “unique visitor” page view count, collected by the servers of the sponsored site, and “click-throughs” were an additional “bonus”.  Now, I’m wondering if I’ve got it wrong about WHO collects this count, and HOW it’s obtained. The reason my query is, after coming across this at Ars… http://arstechnica.com/business/news/2010/03/why-ad-blocking-is-devastating-to-the-sites-you-love.ars … I’m confused at to why using an “ad blocker” would screw up a site’s ability to report a true count to its sponsors, unless these advertisers are actually collecting the information themselves, directly or indirectly, through a “trusted 3rd party” arrangement. The other thing that comes to my mind (and that I don’t see reflected in the many comments Ars got for this post)… Isn’t one of the key reasons for using an ad blocker to PROTECT the user from this type of 3rd-party activity?! And, is Ars attempting to dish out a “guilt trip” to its readers, hoping they’ll all just turn off the ad blockers or whitelist all the sites involved (thereby enabling all 3rd-party user tracking), just to keep its sponsors happy?? ‘Blocking ads is stealing’ “Adblock plus is one of the great reasons to use Firefox,” said a Reader’s Write as far back as 2007, continuing, “I always install it on others peoples systems for them. They always tell me afterwards that pages load faster, and it’s now a pleasure to browse. As far as i’m concerned, everyone should get firefox + adblock plus + g.filterset.” It came in a story headlined Firefox: advertising thief discussing stand-alone ,or built-in, applications designed to block advertising. “You’ve reached this page because the site you were trying to visit now blocks the FireFox browser”, said whyfirefoxisblocked.com the then new site dedicated to trying to convince us blocking ads we don’t want to see isn’t our right, and anyone or anything which helps us to do so is a thief. It declared > > > The Mozilla Foundation and its Commercial arm, the Mozilla Corporation, has allowed and endorsed Ad Block Plus, a plug-in that blocks advertisement on web sites and also prevents site owners from blocking people using it. Software that blocks all advertisement is an infringement of the rights of web site owners and developers. Numerous web sites exist in order to provide quality content in exchange for displaying ads. Accessing the content while blocking the ads, therefore would be no less than stealing. Millions of hard working people are being robbed of their time and effort by this type of software. Many site owners therefore install scripts that prevent people using ad blocking software from accessing their site. That is their right as the site owner to insist that the use of their resources accompanies the presence of the ads. While blanket ad blocking in general is still theft, the real problem is Ad Block Plus’s unwillingness to allow individual site owners the freedom to block people using their plug-in. Blocking FireFox is the only alternative. Demographics have shown that not only are FireFox users a somewhat small percentage of the internet, they actually are even smaller in terms of online spending, therefore blocking FireFox seems to have only minimal financial drawbacks, whereas ending resource theft has tremendous financial rewards for honest, hard-working website owners and developers. “Jeez,” said another Reader’s Write . “I’ve been house sitting for a few days so I watched a few programs on cable. “OMG, I changed the channel every time commercials came on. Who knew I was stealing?” ‘Blocking ads can be devastating to the sites you love’ In the Ars Technica post DA mentions in his email, Ken Fisher kicks off, “Did you know that blocking ads truly hurts the websites you visit? We recently learned that many of our readers did not know this, so I’m going to explain why. “There is an oft-stated misconception that if a user never clicks on ads, then blocking them won’t hurt a site financially. This is wrong.” Hmmmm. How can that be? “Most sites, at least sites the size of ours, are paid on a per view basis,” says Ars, continuing, “If you have an ad blocker running, and you load 10 pages on the site, you consume resources from us (bandwidth being only one of them), but provide us with no revenue. Because we are a technology site, we have a very large base of ad blockers. Imagine running a restaurant where 40% of the people who came and ate didn’t pay. In a way, that’s what ad blocking is doing to us. Just like a restaurant, we have to pay to staff, we have to pay for resources, and we have to pay when people consume those resources. The difference, of course, is that our visitors don’t pay us directly but indirectly by viewing advertising. (Although a few thousand of you are subscribers, and we thank you all very, very much!) “My argument is simple: blocking ads can be devastating to the sites you love. I am not making an argument that blocking ads is a form of stealing, or is immoral, or unethical, or makes someone the son of the devil. It can result in people losing their jobs, it can result in less content on any given site, and it definitely can affect the quality of content. It can also put sites into a real advertising death spin.” So, “Starting late Friday afternoon we conducted a 12 hour experiment to see if it would be possible to simply make content disappear for visitors who were using a very popular ad blocking tool”, says Fisher. “Technologically, it was a success in that it worked. Ad blockers, and only ad blockers, couldn’t see our content.” What a good idea! Ban readers who ignore your ads! He goes on > > > Socially, the experiment was a mixed bag. A bunch of people whitelisted Ars, and even a few  subscribed . And while others showed up to support our actions, there was a healthy mob of people criticizing us for daring to take any kind of action against those who would deny us revenue even though they knew they were doing so. Others rightly criticized the lack of a warning or notification as to what was going on. Ad blockers block ads. But is that all they block? In his email, “The way it looks to me right now is, the 3rd parties are insisting on placing active cookies or engaging in any other user tracking activities (whether direct or indirect), and the ad blockers are preventing these sponsors from doing so, thereby ‘damaging the relationship” between Ars and its sponsors’ ( ? ),” says DA, adding > > > Now, I’m not saying a site shouldn’t have the right to opportunities to earn money, but if my assumptions are correct, this is not the kind of business model I would support.  I don’t visit sites that want to automatically connect my machine to a gang of unknown 3rd parties, regardless of what any of them *say* they’re not collecting or sharing. My computer won’t allow this type of thing, anyway, but if I can’t configure my computer’s security to my satisfaction without it becoming a ‘moral issue’ for the sites I want to visit, I would say the problem would be only with their business models, and shouldn’t be my concern. Either there’s something really odd going on here, or I really have to educate myself on this topic. Do you see what I’m getting at? I do, DA. Meanwhile … … returning to the nastygram mentioned at the beginning, “I see you have only managed to cheat your readers out of $13.01 this month”, it says. The figure was $13.91, not $13.01, and the people who contributed did so because they like p2pnet — same as the people who pumped in more than $1,000 last month. Having said that, I think I recognise the style: the post is very similar in construction to others that’ve been arriving fairly regularly over the past few months. But I’m encouraged because they don’t look like the usual troll junque and flames every site gets. Rather, they fit a pattern. Are they part of some kind of campaign and if they are, who’s behind them, and why? Is this just one person with a hard-on for p2pnet? Or is it someone with enough resources to hire a troll to try to minimise p2pnet? If it’s the former, get a life. But if it’s the latter, great! Stirring things up is one of the things advocacy and alternative news sites such as p2pnet are all about Finally, by way of a heads up, one of my problems has been:  as a businessman, I’d make a great bus driver. With that in mind, for the last few weeks I, and a net pioneer whom I’ve known almost since the beginning, have been talking about him taking over day-to-day management of p2pnet, while I continue to be responsible for content. It’s looking promising. So stay tuned. Cheers! And all the best … Jon - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi p2pnet – Online advertising and the New Consumer, September 2, 2008 Ars Technica – Why Ad Blocking is devastating to the sites you love, March 6, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? - Back to You’ve reached this page because the site you were trying to visit now blocks the FireFox browser , it’s the headline on a new site dedicated to trying to convince us blocking ads we don’t want to see isn’t our right, and anyone or anything which helps us to do so is a thief. whyfirefoxisblocked.com declares: The Mozilla Foundation and its Commercial arm, the Mozilla Corporation, has allowed and endorsed Ad Block Plus, a plug-in that blocks advertisement on web sites and also prevents site owners from blocking people using it. Software that blocks all advertisement is an infringement of the rights of web site owners and developers. Numerous web sites exist in order to provide quality content in exchange for displaying ads. Accessing the content while blocking the ads, therefore would be no less than stealing. Millions of hard working people are being robbed of their time and effort by this type of software. Many site owners therefore install scripts that prevent people using ad blocking software from accessing their site. That is their right as the site owner to insist that the use of their resources accompanies the presence of the ads. While blanket ad blocking in general is still theft, the real problem is Ad Block Plus’s unwillingness to allow individual site owners the freedom to block people using their plug-in. Blocking FireFox is the only alternative. Demographics have shown that not only are FireFox users a somewhat small percentage of the internet, they actually are even smaller in terms of online spending, therefore blocking FireFox seems to have only minimal financial drawbacks, whereas ending resource theft has tremendous financial rewards for honest, hard-working website owners and developers.

Google, Facebook, ‘3 strikes’ concerns

// March 5th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- The Great Unwashed, that’s you and me, have been “expressing grave concerns” about the Hollywood-cum-Big Music ACTA and Three Strikes scams ever since they were first mooted. The lamescream press corpse ignores us. Yet let online advertising companies Fa$ebook and Google do the same and it’s instant  news. Our concerns centre on personal and data privacy — on keeping it out of the hands of the likes of Fa$ebook and Google . Theirs centre on improving their bottom lines on behalf of their owners and shareholders which, to an extent, means somehow mining peoples’ personal and private data, whether they like it or not and, it’s often said, whether they know it or not. “Lib Dem peers are seeking to amend the Digital Economy Bill to allow site blocking for copyright infringement”, p2pnet quoted Open Rights Group ’s Jim Killock as saying at the beginning of the week, stating, “This could lead to unwanted blocking of sites accused of copyright infringement, including sites like Youtube, and a massive chilling effect as any site with user generated content could easily fall foul of provisions like this.” The ISPA (Internet Service Providers Association) joined in saying it was “outraged” by the House of Lords decision to approve Amendment 120A to the UK Digital Economy Bill which would allow the High Court to grant an injunction calling for ISPs to block sites with a “substantial proportion” of content alleged to infringe copyrights. “This would open the door to a massive imbalance of power in favour of large copyright holding companies,” Killock warned in the Telegraph . Individuals and small businesses “would be open to massive ‘copyright attacks’ that could shut them down, just by the threat of action”, he stated. “Whilst we appreciate the concern of opposition front benches to clause 17, we regret that this amendment has been hastily constructed and rushed through at report stage without due consideration of the implications or consultation with the interested parties that would be affected” said ISPA. Now, “The government has been defeated in the House of Lords over measures to tackle online piracy after opponents said the plans could hamper digital innovation”, says the BBC . “Ministers want the power to change laws on online copyright in future without the need for further legislation”, says the story. However, “The Lords said the “blanket nature” of the clause was “objectionable”. But “their chosen replacement – giving courts the right to block internet sites which are infringing copyright – has also prompted criticism”, it says, going on: “The government argued that the new Digital Economy Bill should include the power to amend copyright law to ensure legislation could cope with more technically advanced forms of piracy in the future. “But Google and Facebook were among the firms to express ‘grave concerns’ about the provision, saying it could allow ministers to ‘increase monitoring of user data even where no illegal practice has taken place’.” Both companies have been ‘monitoring’ (to be polite) user data for years, claiming they have only our best interests at heart, and that they need access to the information to “improve users’ online experiences”. “Junior innovation minister Lord Young of Norwood Green said blocking websites was an ‘enormous step’,” says the BBC, going on: “He said it would be hard to block sites offering illegal content without also blocking legitimate material, and agreed that sites linking to other sites – such as search engines – could be adversely affected. ‘I don’t think it would be sensible or appropriate to adopt this approach,’ he warned during the debate on the bill.” However, Geoff Taylor, fromnt man for Vivendi Universal, EMI, Warner Music and Sony Music’s BPI, “welcomed the amendment and said the ISPA’s claim it could lead to ‘blocking based on accusation’ was unfounded, tjhe story adds. Guess who’s making the accusations … Continue to stay tuned. - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi p2pnet – ISPs ‘outraged’ over new copyright threat, March 4, 2010 Open Rights Group – Lib Dems seek web blocking: ask them to stop, March 2, 2010 ISPA – ISPA Outraged by Amendment on Network Level Blocking to Digital Economy Bill, March 3, 2010 Telegraph – YouTube ‘under threat’ from Digital Economy Bill changes, March 4, 2010 BBC – Lords force rethink of government’s online piracy plans, March 5, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Cross-linking and sale of private data

// March 1st, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Politics | Advertising:- German consumer minister Ilse Aigner (right) is concerned about more than US online advertising behemoth Google. She recently suggested Gobble be allowed to display its sneak view Street View pix only “after each affected German citizen has given his or her permission “. Today she “warned of the growing power of internet companies like Google and Apple, as CeBit, the world’s biggest high-tech trade fair, prepared to kick off in Hannover”, says The Local . “There is a pile of money to be made with the cross-linking and sales of private data,” it has telling Aigner  telling the Süddeutsche Zeitung. “Branch giants like Facebook, Apple, Google or Microsoft could construct entire personality profiles online.” She “welcomed a suggestion from Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière to provide citizens with a yearly report on their personal data saved online”, it says, continuing, “ ‘Such a commitment from the providers could be a solution,’ she told the paper. ‘Currently the consumers can only find out with difficulty who knows what about them.’ “As an electrical engineer I can only take pleasure in innovation. But everything has its boundaries. Some developments, such as face recognition software for mobile phones with cameras to identify people on the street, send chills down my spine. Even George Orwell couldn’t have dreamt that up.” Her comments “followed similar concerns voiced by Germany’s federal data protection commissioner Peter Schaar last week”, says The Local, adding: “He called for a review of internet search engine company Google’s market dominance and said the company’s Street View mapping technology was a particular threat to privacy.” - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi given his or her permission – Google scoffs at Berlin Street View concerns, February 25, 2010 The Local – Minister warns of growing might of Google, Facebook and Apple, March 1, 1020 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

EU warns Google over Street View

// February 26th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Politics | Advertising:- Giant US advertising company Google sneaks pictures of people, their homes, the streets where they walk and the places they relax without telling them, or asking if it’s OK. Then it plasters the results on Street View Snoop-O-Rama sites, claiming the product, an adjunct to its advertising efforts, is a ’service’ Now, however, “European Union data privacy regulators are telling Google Inc. to warn people before it sends cameras out into cities to take pictures for its Street View maps, adding to the company’s legal worries in Europe”, says the Associated Press , going on: “Google should shorten the time it keeps the original photos from one year to six months,” regulators also say, according to the story. Actually, Gargle shouldn’t be allowed to use even one picture unless it’s had permission in advance , a proposition supported by German consumer affairs minister Ilse Aigner. However, “Google said its need to retain Street View images for one year is ‘legitimate and justified’,” says the story. Gargoyle “already posts notifications on its Web site about where its Street View cameras are clicking”, it says. In other words, people have to go looking to see if their localities have been snooped and if they have, they’re forced to perform laborious, and far from simple, visual searches to see if they’ve been targetted. And if they have, they then have to ask Gargle to take the offending images down, a task which can take days. And if they’re not online, forget it. The EU warning follows the conviction in Italy of three Google exeutives for failure to comply with privacy laws. Google says it’ll appeal. Also “EU antitrust authorities said that Google’s rivals have complained that it demotes their sites in the rankings it uses on its search engine, the world’s most popular”, says AP, adding, “The EU said it was not opening an antitrust case – and Google said it had done nothing wrong.” Google has stalled and waffled on privacy concerns from the day the ’service’ started in 2007. Over to you, Google shills … - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi Associated Press – Google warned by EU over Street View map photos, February 25, 2010 permission in advance – Google scoffs at Berlin Street View concerns, February 25, 2010 failure to comply – Google execs guilty of privacy violations: court, February 24, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Google scoffs at Berlin Street View concerns

// February 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Politics | Advertising:- It’s been repeatedly proven, not the least by p2pnet, that claims by advertising gorilla Google that its Street View product doesn’t infringe people’s privacy are worth about as much as its Do No Evil motto. Now the company is dismissing “strong privacy objections” raised by the German government, says Deutsche Welle . “Google, which wants to extend its Street View panoramic photos to Germany later this year, has rejected strong privacy objections raised by the German government”, says the story, going on > > > Consumer Affairs Minister Ilse Aigner is demanding that the Internet giant only displays its imagery after each affected German citizen has given his or her permission. Minister Aigner said her staff were consulting with justice ministry officials, with the aim of tightening legislation. She also demanded that Google be ready to make people’s faces, car and house numbers, and even facades unrecognizable. “A vague picture pixel change is not sufficient,” she said in Berlin. “I do not share the company’s assessment that all personal data concerns have been resolved.” Her ministry, she said, had been flooded with calls by citizens worried about protecting their privacy. Privacy ‘concerns’ Google SnoopMobiles take pix of people and their homes without their knowledge or permission. Then the company spashes them online millions of times around the world via a product it calls a ’service’. And Snoople doesn’t give a flying sexual intercourse what anyone, including entire nations, has to say about it. Below are just a few p2pnet headlines, in no particular order. The contents point up privacy ‘concerns’. Does Google Street View racially profile people? Dear Google Street View … Google Street View pic as ‘evidence’? Google Steet View at Swiss abortion clinics Google to p2pnet on Street View UK Google Street View (mis)adventure There are plenty more. And as far as we know, Switzerland is still suing Gargoyle for failing to adequately blur sensitive images on Street View. Says the Financial Times today: “Google has also recently lost points with European regulators over its plans to make books searchable, and over privacy, with its StreetView service arousing particular concern in several countries. Swiss authorities, for example, have taken Google to court over the service.” A “consultant hired by Google, Nikolas Forgo, who is a Hanover professor on informatics law, said a violation of personal rights was improbable”, says Deutsche Welle, adding: “Google has already pledged to disguise car number plates and peoples’ faces.” But as p2pnet has demonstrated a number of times, vehicle license plates, faces, locations — you name it — are clearly visible in scores of ‘obscured’ Google Street View pix. Stay tuned. - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi Deutsche Welle – Google rejects Berlin’s privacy concerns over Street View application, February 23, 2010 still suing Gargoyle – Switzerland to sue over Google Street View, November 13, 2009 Financial Times – Microsoft cashes in on Google woes, February 25, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? - http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5279225,00.html

Microsoft Online Surveillance Guide online

// February 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Freedom | P2P:- “Cryptome is a website hosted in the United States since 1996 by independent scholars[1] and architects John Young and Deborah Natsios,[2] that functions as a repository for information about freedom of speech, cryptography, spying, and surveillance”, says the Wikipedia . Or it did. But at the moment, when you surf over to the site all you get is ‘Server Not Found’. And that’s because Cryptome pissed off Microsoft. Says GeekOSystem > > > Cryptome , a whistleblower site that regularly leaks sensitive documents from governments and corporations, is in hot water again: this time, for publishing Microsoft’s “Global Criminal Compliance Handbook,” a comprehensive, 22-page guide running down the surveillance services Microsoft will perform for law enforcement agencies on its various online platforms, which includes detailed instructions for IP address extraction. You can find the guide here (warning: PF) . not any more. Microsoft has demanded that Cryptome take down the guide — on the grounds that it constitutes a “copyrighted [work] published by Microsoft.” Yesterday, at 5pm, Cryptome editor John Young received a notice from his site’s host, Network Solutions, bearing a stiff ultimatum: citing the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA), Network Solutions told him that unless he takes the “copyrighted material” down, they will “disable [his] website” on Thursday, February 25, 2010. So far, Young refuses to budge, says the story. The guide explicates how it stores your data, revealing “how long the firm keeps your information and details how the authorities can get hold of it”, says electricpig.co.uk , going on: “Law enforcement agencies in the US need warrants and court orders to grab data. Microsoft is legally required to follow those instructions but it doesn’t have to offer up such thorough details.” It covers Xbox Live, Windows Live, MSN and Microsoft Office Live accounts and data include your name, address “and credit card number in some cases”, it states. The Cryptome Microsoft® Online Services Global Criminal Compliance Handbook U.S. Domestic Version March 2008 is, of course, currently unavailable. But Hey! This is the net! And anyway, as you’d expect, there’s a copy on Wikileaks . (We’ve stashed one here as well, just in case.) Stay tuned. - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi GeekOSystem – Site Leaks Microsoft Online Surveillance Guide, MS Demands Takedown Under Copyright Law, February 24, 2010 electricpig.co.uk – Microsoft’s Xbox Live and Windows Live spying guide leaks, February 25, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Google boss Schmidt’s online girlfriend

// February 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- Do No Evil boss Eric Schmidt’s personal home page doesn’t have a pic of Kate Bohner on it. In fact, it doesn’t have anything on it. Apparently, Ms Bohner was/is/was Schmidt’s secret girlfriend and on the weekend gone his “aggressive lawyers” brought down her “online recovery diary”, says ValleyWag . Schmidt, a married man, is the primary figure behind giant US advertising company Google, motto, Do No Evil And If You Get Caught, Call Your Lawyers. He “parted ways with Bohner last summer, but that hasn’t kept him out of what a tipster in his ex-girlfriend’s social circle called her ‘pet project:’ a multimedia confessional autobiography, including a Google-hosted blog called ‘Recovery Girl 007′, and eventually a book”, said Valleywag last Friday, going on: “On the blog, Bohner writes about Schmidt, dubbing him ‘Dr. Strangelove’ and disclosing that he gave her a prototype iPhone. She also calls Steve Jobs a ’stoned Jesuit preist’ … That aside, the intricate online memoir-in-progress primarily details Bohner’s recovery from cocaine and alcohol addiction via 12-step programs and yoga.” In an update, “Now the site has been removed from Google’s Blogspot, where it was hosted” says Valleywag , adding: “Bohner removed the site after threats from Schmidt’s lawyers this weekend, according to a source close to the situation. ” ‘When a billionaire threatens you, you get in line,’ this person said.” Bohner is a former CNBC and Frobes journalist, says the story. Stay tuned. (Cheers, Andrew aka Comeoncomcast ) - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi Valleywag – The Google CEO and His Mistress: The Tell-All Blog, February 19, 2010 Valleywag – Google’s CEO Demanded His Mistress Take Down Her Blog: Source, February 22, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Vevo: fail, despite Lady Gaga

// February 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Advertising | Music:- Lady Gaga is apparently Vevo’s primary money earner. And we DO mean primary! Vevo was “built to help advertisers and content owners”, according to Vevo guy Rio Caraeff. Big surprise, eh? “Vevo was created by three of the largest record companies–Universal Music, Sony Music Entertainment, and EMI Music. Warner Music Group is in negotiations to join as well”, says CNet News , going on, also stating > > > Ted Mico, executive vice president of digital for Interscope/Geffen, a music label owned by Universal Music Group, said at the Digital Music East conference that Lady Gaga’s videos account for a quarter of Vevo’s traffic. Thomas Hesse, the chief of Sony Music’s digital operations, is quoting as saying Vevo “sees billions of page views but that, two months after its debut, the service is not yet profitable”. If the name Hesse seems familiar, said p2pnet recently: “Sony BMG weasled DRM (Digital Restrictions Management) and rootkit spyware onto the computers of people who’d bought some of its music CDs, said p2pnet back in 2005, going on, “The software – the SunnComm version also exposed users to potentially serious security problems – was hidden on the discs and secretly installed itself when buyers played the music.” Hesse wondered at the subsequent outrage, saying, ‘Most people, I think, do not even know what a Rootkit is, so why should they care about it?’; and described the spyware issue as “slight”. He still hasn’t been fired.” No need to stay tuned. - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi help advertisers – Vevo wasn’t created for consumers!, December 11, 2009 CNet News – Lady Gaga generates 25 percent of Vevo’s traffic, February 24, 2010 p2pnet – Digital Music Forums east love-in, February 13, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Angry Hollywood studios swarm iiNet

// February 25th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Movies | P2P | Politics:- In the world of the corporate entertainment industry, if they can’t beat, they swarm you. That’s what’s happening to Australian ISP iiNet which won its case fairly squarely against AFART, Hollywood’s RIAA/MPAA thingy which was ordered to pay legal costs of some $4 million. As  p2pnet said recently, Oz has a lot in common with Britain. They’re both run by politicians in the pockets of the corporate entertainment industry, they both believe they have the right to decide what their citizens should see and hear, they’re both run by limp Labour governments which are on their way out … and they’re both home to half-assed scam outfits called FACT, owned by ie, Disney, News Corp, Time Warner, Viacom, NBC Universal and Sony Pictures, ie, FACT, Farcical Approaches to Copyright Transgressions , or Federation Against Copyright Theft. Now, “34 movie studios will appeal a Federal Court ruling earlier this month that internet provider iiNet could not be held responsible for illegal downloads”, says news.com.au . According to AFART, “the judgment had left an unworkable online environment for content creators and providers, and represented a serious threat to Australia’s digital economy”. “It is more than disappointing and frustrating that the studios have chosen this unproductive path”, iiNet Michal Malone (right) is quoted as saying. “This legal case has not stopped one illegal download and further legal appeals will not stop piracy.” Stay tuned. (Thanks, Wozzzaaa and Andrew aka Comeoncomcast) - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi p2pnet – iiNet gives AFACT a pounding!, February 4, 2010 news.com.au - Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -



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