Tweeter button
Facebook button
Technorati button
Myspace button
Linkedin button
Delicious button
Digg button
Stumbleupon button
Newsvine button
Youtube button
You are here: Morethan Creative - experts in social media »

Tag : more than creative

Social Networks Play a Major Part in How We Get News [STATS]

Social Networks Play a Major Part in How We Get News [STATS]

The latest study from Pew Internet analyzes the news Americans are consuming and various different ways they find news. Based on a sample of 2,259 adults, the study reveals that three fourths of the people (75%) who find news online get it either forwarded through e-mail or posts on social networking sites, and half of them (52%) forward the news through those means.

This translates to a large portion of all Americans. According to the report, 59% of those surveyed get news from a combination of online and offline sources.

However, the study also shows that very few people nowadays (7%) are getting information from a single media platform. In fact, nearly half of Americans (46%) claim they get news from four to six media platforms on a typical day. And while TV is still the biggest source of news (78% of Americans say they get news from a local TV station), Internet sits at second place (61% of users get news online), ahead of radio and newspapers. Interestingly enough, relatively few people — only 17% — claim they read news in a national newspaper such as The New York Times or USA Today.

Also interesting is the division between news consumers according to their relationship to news. Thirty-three percent of cellphone owners now access news on their phones, and 28% use personalized news, meaning they have a customized page that includes news from sources they’ve chosen. Perhaps most importantly, news consumers today participate in the creation of news; 37% have contributed to news creation, commented on news or shared it via social media sites such as Facebook or Twitter.

The entire report is available here.

Google Execs Convicted in Italian Privacy Case | Governance | ITBusinessEdge.com

Google Execs Convicted in Italian Privacy Case Feb 24, 2010 9:27:43 AM

According to The New York Timesan Italian court has convicted three Google executives of violating privacy laws for allowing a 2006 video of students bullying an autistic boy to air on the now-defunct Google Video site.

David Drummond, Google’s senior vice president and chief legal officer; Peter Fleischer, Google’s chief privacy counsel; and George Reyes, the company’s former chief financial officer, were sentenced to six months in prison. As The Wall Street Journal reports, the three don’t face extradition or jail timebecause Italy automatically suspends prison sentences of less than three years.

The ruling sets a legal precedent in Europe as to whether Internet companies can be held legally liable for content that is posted on video sites by third parties. BusinessWeek quotes Greg Sterling, an analyst at Sterling Market Intelligence, as saying:

It’s a bad decision. It sets a bad precedent. The individuals didn’t have any control over the private parties involved in the underlying dispute.

Certainly, as V3.co.uk notes, David Drummond agrees:

If individuals like myself and my Google colleagues, who had nothing to do with the harassing incident, its filming or its uploading onto Google Video, can be held criminally liable solely by virtue of our positions at Google, every employee of any Internet hosting service faces similar liability.

Google is no stranger to privacy issues. Its Street View service has drawn the ire of many, including Switzerland, which announced plans to sue Google for failing to obscure faces, license plates and other sensitive images. More recently, Google Buzz is creating a fair amount of rancor. The Electronic Privacy Information Center has filed a complaint with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission claiming that Google Buzz violates user privacy.

Web Faceoff: Adobe Flash vs. HTML5

Web Faceoff: Adobe Flash vs. HTML5

Every week, we pit two web apps or companies against each other in our web faceoff series. In the past, we’ve put Android vs. iPhoneDigg vs. Reddit, and Windows 7 vs. Snow Leopardorder to see which one was truly the people’s choice.

This week, we’re tweaking the competitors a bit. Over the last few weeks, you may have heard about a battle brewing between Adobeadobe AIR and Apple. It all started when Apple slyly revealed that the iPad would not support Flash.

This quickly broke out into a heated debate: Should we be abandoning Flash for HTML5, the new version of the web’s mark-up language that can support video, audio and more? Steve Jobs certainly thinks so.

Now with more people chiming in, we think it’s time to take the pulse of the people.

Which will eventually win out in the end: Adobe Flash or HTML5? Which is better for the future of the web? Do you think Apple has the muscle to take down Adobe’s widely used plug-in?

Make your choice in the poll below, which will close on Friday, February 27, at 12:00 p.m. PT. Then let us know your opinions on this matter in the comments.

Who would win in a fight: Adobe Flash or HTML5?







Faceoff Series: Overall Results


Week 1:
Mozilla Firefox vs. Google Chrome
WINNER: Firefox, 4600 votes (Chrome: 3310 votes, Tie: 911 votes)

Week 2:
Tumblr vs. Posterous
WINNER: Tumblr, 1809 votes (Posterous: 1496 votes, Tie: 256 votes)

Week 3:
Pandora vs. Last.fm
WINNER: Last.fm, 1187 votes (Pandora: 1156 votes, Tie: 122 votes)

Week 4:
Twitter vs. Facebook
WINNER: Facebook, 2484 votes (Twitter: 2061 votes, Tie: 588 votes)

Week 5:
WordPress vs. Typepad
WINNER: WordPress, 2714 votes (Typepad: 267 votes, Tie: 357 votes)

Week 6:
Windows 7 vs. Snow Leopard
WINNER: Windows 7, 3632 votes (Snow Leopard: 3278 votes, Tie: 121 votes)

Week 7:
TweetDeck vs. Seesmic Desktop
WINNER: TweetDeck, 3294 votes (Seesmic Desktop: 1055 votes, Tie: 260 votes)

Week 8:
Microsoft Office vs. Google Docs
WINNER: Microsoft Office, 1365 votes (Google Docs: 994 votes, Tie: 315 votes)

Week 9:
Apple iPhone vs. Google Android
WINNER: Google Android, 3323 votes (Apple iPhone: 1494 votes, Tie: 228 votes)

Week 10:
AT&T vs. Verizon
WINNER: Verizon, 1161 votes (AT&T: 538 votes, Tie: 118 votes)

Week 11:
Google vs. Bing
WINNER: Google, 2180 votes (Bing: 519 votes, Tie: 97 votes)

Week 12:
iPod Touch/iPhone vs. Nintendo DS vs. Sony PSP
WINNER: iPod Touch/iPhone, 704 votes (Sony PSP: 639 votes, Nintendo DS: 482 votes, Tie: 108 votes)

Week 13:
Digg vs. Reddit vs. StumbleUpon
WINNER: Digg, 14,762 votes (Reddit: 11,466 votes, StumbleUpon: 2507 votes, Tie: 1032 votes)

Week 14:
Old versus new Twitter retweets
WINNER: Old style retweets, 1625 votes (New style retweets: 699 votes, Tie: 227 votes)

Week 15:
Gmail vs. Outlook
WINNER: Gmail, 3684 votes (Outlook: 980 votes, Tie: 590 votes)

Week 16:
Boxee vs. Hulu
WINNER: Hulu, 626 votes (Boxee: 591 votes, Tie: 106 votes)

Week 17:
Nexus One vs. iPhone 3GS
WINNER: Nexus One, 6743 votes (iPhone 3GS: 2818 votes, Tie: 592 votes)

Week 18:
Foursquare vs. Yelp vs. Gowalla
WINNER: Foursquare, 1182 votes, (Yelp: 661 votes, Gowalla: 509 votes, Tie: 143 votes)

Week 19:
AIM vs. GTalk vs. FbChat
WINNER: GTalk, 2189 votes, (AIM: 1257 votes, FbChat: 511 votes, Tie: 203 votes)

Week 20:
Music Ownership vs. Music Subscription
WINNER: Ownership, 533 votes (Subscription: 299 votes, Tie: 237)

Week 21:
Match.com vs. PlentyofFish
WINNER: Plenty of Fish, 430 votes (Match.com: 334 votes, Tie: 187 votes)

Week 21:
Google Buzz vs. Facebook Vs. Twitter
WINNER: Facebook, 3353 votes (Twitter: 1828 votes, Google Buzz: 1298 votes, Tie: 651 votes)