Tuesday, January 31, 2012

BEBO = GONE ?

The co-founder of Bebo has denied claims the social networking site has shut down.
Michael Birch, who launched the one time Facebook and Myspace rival with his wife in 2005, sparked confusion on Twitter last night.

"Am super sad that Bebo has actually gone. Some very fun times with very cool people. #RIPbebo - keep sharing that luv!"

But it wasn't long before he tweeted again, creating the mix up.

"Hold the press (too late for that). Bebo should be coming back in a matter of hours.
#LongLiveBebo".
 
Sold for £540m

According to reports Bebo has been taken offline because of technical problems.
Adding to the confusion was a lack of information from either of the site's official Twitter feeds.

There's been no comment on either TeamBebo or Official_Bebo for weeks.

Users have been using Facebook and Twitter to talk about their memories of the site.

Ian Morrow used Newsbeat's Facebook page to write: "please do something on Bebo shutting down without warning."

"Have lost thousands of good memories," he added.

But Steph Yule tweeted: "Why's everyone greetin about Bebo? No ones used it in years!"
Founded in 2005 at one point Bebo was as popular as Facebook and Myspace with tens of millions of users.

But since it was bought by AOL in 2008 for £540 million the site rapidly lost users and value.
AOL sold it just two years later to private equity firm Criterion Capital Partners for a fraction of the price paid for it, reportedly just £6.3million.

BBC News January 31st 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/16810502

Sunday, January 29, 2012

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Thursday, January 26, 2012

SOPA = BAD impact for Ireland !

Minister of State Sean Sherlock has said he still plans to introduce a statutory instrument to amend copyright legislation in the near future despite concerns expressed about its potential impact on internet access.

The matter was raised as a topical issue in the Dáil today by Independent TD Catherine Murphy, who said further discussion was needed before any changes were made to the law.

An online petition opposing the proposed amendment has continued to grow, recording over 48,000 signatures since it began earlier this week.

Opponents fear that the change could potentially see court orders blocking popular sites like YouTube and Facebook.

There are also concerns that the law could make Ireland less attractive to technology start-ups and multinational companies like Google.

In the Dáil today, Deputy Murphy said there was a fear that copyright holders could use the amended legislation to force Internet Service Providers like UPC and Eircom into blocking popular websites because a single user is found to have infringed on intellectual property.

Deputy Murphy said such a complex issue would better dealt with through primary legislation and that TDs faced a "hurricane storm" of anger from the public if people were not satisfied with the way the issue was handled.

In response, Deputy Sherlock said the planned amendment "merely re-stated an existing position" and was being introduced to ensure that Ireland complied with a European directive on the matter.

He insisted the change was not comparable to the controversial SOPA bill that has been drafted in the United States and that it was not the intention of the Government to limit the freedom of the internet.

Deputy Sherlock said any judge considering an injunction would have to balance the rights of a copyright holder with those afforded to ISPs and users under ecommerce and freedom of expression directives.

He offered to have further discussion on the matter - however Mr Sherlock could not say if that would happen before the statutory instrument was put in place.

He also said primary legislation may ultimately be required to deal with the issue but that no changes would solve the problem of piracy as the internet tends to adapt to "circumnavigate" new laws.

He said there was a need for ISPs, copyright holders and members of the industry in Ireland to sit down voluntarily in order to find a solution that protected everyone's interests.

Protests in Poland over anti-piracy agreement

Yesterday thousands of young Poles hit city streets across the country in a mounting wave of off-and-online protest against a government decision to sign an international anti-online piracy accord.

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk has vowed to endorse, aims to create international standards for intellectual property protection.

However, Internet groups including global hacker collective Anonymous oppose it as limiting online freedoms.

Poland, an ex-communist state which joined the EU in 2004, has committed to signing ACTA today.

A protest by thousands organised largely via Facebook in the central Polish city of Kielce yesterday turned violent when some protesters trashed cars and attacked police, the commercial TVN24 news channel reported.

Protesters also turned out for anti-ACTA rallies in Wroclaw, Szczecin, Olsztyn and Bialystok.

Online protest pages on Facebook have attracted more than 300,000 supporters, while an anti-ACTA online petition had drawn about 130,000 signatures by yesterday evening.

Protesters are upset Mr Tusk's government pushed ahead with ACTA after meetings with commercial media, but held no public consultations with online rights groups.

SOURCE : RTE NEWS 26th JANUARY 2012

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

SOPA = BAD

Wikipedia has blacked out its English-language site for 24 hours to seek support against proposed US anti-piracy legislation it says threatens the future of the internet.

The English language Wikipedia receives an average of more than 25 million daily visitors from around the world, according to comScore data.

The service will be the highest profile name to join a growing campaign that will see it black out its pages so visitors will only see information about the controversial Stop Online Piracy Act (Sopa) and the Protect Intellectual Property Act (Pipa).

"When you are trying to do your research paper, when you are just trying to find some factual information and a lot of people rely on Wikipedia, it won't be there," said Lance Ulanoff, editor in chief of online news site Mashable.

"They'll basically come to a message that says they've gone dark in protest."





Smaller site Boing Boing has also blacked out its pages, with those behing Reddit.com have promised to do the same.

Search engine Google will not black out its pages but a link will be placed on their homepage connecting to information about why Sopa may not be a good thing.

Google has repeatedly said the bill goes too far and could hurt investment.

Along with other Internet companies such as Yahoo, Facebook, Twitter and eBay, it has run advertisements in major newspapers urging Washington lawmakers to rethink their approach.

The Sopa legislation under consideration in the House of Representatives and Pipa in the Senate aims to crack down on online sales of pirated American movies, music or other goods by forcing internet companies to block access to foreign sites offering material that violates US copyright laws.

Advertising networks could also be required to stop online ads, while search engines would be barred from directly linking to websites found to be distributing pirated goods.

The proposed laws would also force some websites offline.

    How it will work:

US Attorney's office will have the power to order internet providers not to carry offshore sites it deems illegal

    What providers will have to do:

Monitor customers' traffic and block web sites suspected of copyright infringement

    Who supports Sopa:

 The music recording industry, Hollywood film companies, police and firefighters among others

    Who is against Sopa:

Most of the internet industry including Google, Facebook, Twitter, eBay and LinkedIn

Source : Sky News 18th January 2012






Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Website Mobile Ready ?

The mobile web is growing at a phenomenal pace, and is forecast to overtake the desktop web in 2014. In other words, more users will access the Internet using a mobile phone rather than a PC for the first time.

Approximately 900 million people currently access the web with mobile phones, compared to 1.4 billion desktop Internet users. In 2014, mobile web users will outpace desktop users (approximately 1.7 billion mobile users to approximately 1.65 billion desktop users). By 2015, the number of mobile web users is expected to grow to 2 billion.


Assuming an annual growth rate of about 2 percent annually between 2010 and 2015 in cell phone subscriptions (77 percent of the world's population will have cell phone subscriptions in 2010 and 87 percent will have subscriptions in 2015), about 6.35 billion people worldwide will have a mobile phone subscription and approximately 1 out of 3 subscribers(or 2 billion out of 6.35 billion) will be accessing the Internet on mobile phones. (Source: Wikimedia)

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Monday, January 2, 2012

New Year = New Leads

So you have a website but are you using it to its potential ? Over half of people will look for you on line today than any other source. Remember to integrate Facebook / Twitter accounts into your site to help drive traffic and new customers to it.

Also getting paid on line now is very simple with merchants such as PayPal making the process very easy. Contact us today too see how we can help you grab your potential customers. 

Happy New Year !