Popular Posts

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Google and Facebook are changing the electronic world, but would it be a safe world?

  1. Google Mobile Payment Systems
As discussed on a previous blog entry, mobile payment is already a reality in the US thanks to the coffee house leader Starbucks. By using a technology called near-field-communication (NFC) and with the assistance of a special ship, cell phones are now capable of storing coupons, store loyalty information and more importantly credit card information that can be transmitted to a register with a simple tap. In fact, the technology seems to be so promising that last week several news sources reported that the world’s largest internet search company, Google, will soon become a new entrant in the industry. Google is said to announce plans to start a pilot program in New York and San Francisco that will allow retailers to accept payments through smart phones by using the new Google Mobile Payment System, which aims to make mobile payment a mainstream method of payment in the US.

But while mobile payment systems could definitely make our life easier it also has a lot of potential to increase issues related to identity theft and privacy. Before adopting the technology I assume many consumers could have the same questions I have: Can I accidentally swipe my phone? What if someone hacks into my phone and obtains my bank account? How much information will I be sharing? What happens if I lose my phone?

While there are no readily available statistics indicating how many people lose their phones each year, a Yankee Group survey of 2,900 households with wireless phones last September found that 19 percent had bought cell phones in the last year to replace ones they had. And as we know Google has been scrutinized in different occasions about its privacy policies regarding many of its services such as Google Maps, Google Earth and Google Groups. Also, it is not clear yet how banks will respond to complaints about unauthorized charges made with stolen phones. As of today, most of them offer a zero liability on unauthorized purchases but how will they address this new technology? I guess until these questions are answered I will be reluctant to become an early adapter. How about the rest of you?

  1. Facebook Search Protocol
A couple of years ago Facebook was a social media site that could be used to share information with a select small community of your own choosing. High school friends, family members, relatives, neighbors, work colleagues and many other of your friends were the typical set of people who could have access to the information posted by you. But today, the company is just so much more than that. Just recently they received the patent to a Search Engine that combines “any type of search engine results with the popularity of each result among members of a user’s social network.” In other words, your network of friends will help you decide what things to buy, what events to attend and any other decision you are faced with while searching the web.

But let’s not forget that just in October 2010 a Wall Street Journal investigation found that many of the most popular applications on Facebook have been transmitting information such as peoples’ name and in some cases even their friends’ names to dozens of advertisers and online tracking companies, allowing corporations to track your web activity without your knowledge. Would that be the case with this new search engine? I know the technology sounds great and that many people will use it, because of its convenience, but what price are we willing to pay in the name of technology? Aren’t we giving away our privacy to companies we do not even know? 

For decades the American consumer has fought for the right of privacy and to keep away corporations and even the government from our daily activities, but it seems like we are willing to grant all those right in an electronic world. Again, as in the case of Google Payment System I find myself reluctant to use this technology mainly because I do not trust the privacy settings of these companies and because I do not believe they are concerned with creating a safe electronic world.

Norberto Munoz.


References:

·         Losing a Cell Phone: A Pain Even Insurance Can't End

·         Swiping Is the Easy Part

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/24/technology/24wallet.html?_r=1&ref=googleinc

·         Google Is Said to Test Mobile-Payment System With VeriFone


  • Facebook further reduces your control over personal information

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Myspace: Gone with the wind

In the romantic novel Gone with the wind written in 1936 by Margaret Micthell, the novel’s protagonist, Scarlet O’Hara, uses the title phrase when her home is overtaken by the Yankees, she wonders to herself if her home is still standing, or if it was “also gone with the wind which had swept through Georgia.” Today, in the year 2011 social media users are asking themselves if the once top visited social media site Myspace, is still standing, or if it has been overtaken by Facebook and Twitter, who have more than 800 million users combined. At the same time investors, and users, are also wondering If Myspace still has a chance of reinvent itself to avoid an evident death.

Among the alternatives that can save Myspace from a painful demise, focusing on a niche market and finding integration among music artist, movies, and television shows seems to be the most appealing. In fact, in an interview with The New York Times Michael Jones, the president of Myspace, a unit of News Corporation, said that the more than 120 million Myspace members were primarily using the site to listen to music and share opinions and information about that music, as well as about movies and television shows. Therefore, the company had decided to revamp its Website, narrowing its focus on entertainment for people 13 to 35 years of age, also known as Generation Y. And Mr. Jones said Myspace would no longer seek to compete with Facebook, but rather to complement it. “Our focus is social entertainment,” he said. “Niche players have long staying power.”

Unfortunately, succeeding with this new strategy will not be easy. “They are definitely trying to become more relevant again,” said Debra Aho Williamson, a senior analyst at eMarketer. “But it is going to be hard, because so much time has gone by.” As with any product, technology also has a life cycle in which those who become too complacent and lack innovation can never make it back. And while Myspace is already creating joint ventures with music companies, that niche is already under attack by new comers like Reverbenation and Bandcamp.

Besides failing to innovate and be competing in a market that has been attacked already by many other sites, statistics gathered by metric companies such as Compete.com, and Alexa.com have only signaled a strong decline in users and daily visits to the Myspace. According to recent reports, the site had 54.4 million users at the end of November 2011, a loss of more than nine million from the previous year. These findings only confirm that as the house of Scarlet O’Hara in the popular 1936 novel, Myspace is officially gone with the wind.

 

 (Video taken from Currentv.com)

Norberto Munoz
A Marketing Dose!


References:

• The death of Myspace
http://www.pedestrian.tv/entertainment/features/the-death-of-myspace-a-former-employee-looks-back/31505.htm

• Hot Social Networking Site Cools as Facebook Grows
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/12/technology/internet/12myspace.html?ref=myspacecom

• For Myspace, a Redesign to Entice Generation Y
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/27/technology/27myspace.html?ref=myspacecom

• How to Save Myspace from a Slow and Painful Death
http://e-marketingforsensiblefolk.blogspot.com/2011/03/savingmyspace.html