Online Social Optimization
July 13th, 2011

Thoughts on the twitter downfall of last week

It is fascinating to read the thoughts of others in real time during a public event. In the wake of an experience details perforated the walls of power with the voice of pluralistic hegemonies formed in counter publics but brought into a convocation that can be quantified.

Certainly the twitter townhall can act as a guise, but literally any given day we see segmented and patriotic discussion around any given issue. True, it is easier to get a true measure or reach during peak moments.

Now with Google plus adapting as fast as people use it, to their needs, and in a myriad of observable ways, we can apprehend the future enough to know that twitterfall is upon us, where as Facebook has become the premier yellow and white pages.

by publcindividual | Posted in Social Optimization | Comments Off | Tags: , , ,
July 5th, 2011

Are we becoming slaves to the “like” button? — Tech News and Analysis

Neil Strauss argues that we are, and that all of this implicit and explicit voting that takes place in social networks is encouraging a kind of vicious conformity. We no longer reveal our true selves online, he says, because so many of us are obsessed with judging our conduct based on whether it is approved by our friends, followers or social graph. But is that true? And if so, is it social networking’s fault?

Strauss argues that widespread use of social-networking features such as the “like” button, the retweet and the +1 button that is part of the new Google+ are effectively training us to only respond to things that have become popular — and to govern our own behavior so that it gets more likes and retweets, which he says effectively suppresses any unusual or controversial opinion in favor of the mainstream or predictable.

via Are we becoming slaves to the “like” button? — Tech News and Analysis.

by unruh | Posted in Further Reading | Comments Off | Tags: , ,
May 13th, 2011

NYT: Facebook, Foe of Anonymity, Is Forced to Explain a Secret

http://mobile.nytimes.com/article?a=789206
D

anny Sullivan, the editor of Search Engine Land, an industry blog, said, “It has the taint of a smear campaign despite what Facebook is saying.”
Facebook insiders, who agreed to speak on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter, said the company hired the well-known public relations firm Burson-Marsteller to suggest stories about Social Circle to reporters because it did not want the issue to turn into a Facebook versus Google story. Social Circle is an optional feature of Google search that uses publicly available information from social networks to personalize search results.

This amuses me and has all the elements of a Bruce Sterling novel from the eighties.

by publcindividual | Posted in Interstitial Spaces | Comments Off | Tags: , ,
April 13th, 2011

Don’t eat your face by being an asshat.

image

http://findusonfacebook.tumblr.com/

Excellent tumblr blog above written by @ABlakeley which provides valuable clues on not being an asshat with your social media assets. Think carefully about relying on one social media third party network to be your primary replacement microsite though because when the site trends into a demographic you aren’t optimizing for, the results will only seem funny to others. (Thanks to the seemingly omnipresent @briansolis for pointing this out in a tweet earlier this morning.)

Attached is a rough beginning to the mind map I’m building, related in a parallel way to the link above.














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