Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Yahoo making new Facebook connections

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Yahoo Inc. said Wednesday it will soon integrate Facebook Connect into its many Web sites, allowing users to monitor their Facebook feeds while surfing the company’s sites.

It will also allow users to opt to have their Yahoo activity shown on their Facebook news feed.

Facebook users can already access their feeds on Yahoo’s homepage, and share some specific Yahoo content on Facebook. The new policy expands this to other Yahoo sites, including Flickr, as well as its Sports, News and Finance sites.

The Wall Street Journal’s All Things Digital blog reported the moves are part of a massive social networking update dubbed “Project Rushmore.”

It said similar changes could follow involving Twitter, LinkedIn and MySpace, citing unnamed sources.

The New York Times reported that no money is changing hands in the Facebook-Yahoo move, with the companies instead getting a broader reach for their products.

“There is lot of potential future integration work we can do,” the Times quoted Yahoo spokesman Jim Stoneham as saying, adding that he described the arrangement as a “very deep long-term partnership.”

The changes are expected to be in place in the first half of 2010.

Facebook wins $711M in spam suit – South Florida Business Journal:

Friday, October 30th, 2009

Facebook Inc. said Thursday that it won a $711 million damage award from Internet marketer Sanford Wallace for spamming its popular social networking site.

Palo Alto-based Facebook alleged that Wallace accessed its users’ accounts without permission and sent them phony posts and messages after accessing their accounts.

The company announced the damages award in a post on its blog Thursday night, saying the San Jose district court judge in the case also referred Wallace to the U.S. Attorney’s office for prosecution for criminal contempt of court.

Wallace did not oppose the damages motion nor appear at the Sept. 18 hearing, according to a court filing.

Facebook’s General Counsel Sam O’Rourke wrote in the blog posting, “While we don’t expect to receive the vast majority of the award, we hope that this will act as a continued deterrent against these criminals.”

The Wallace case marks the second large anti-spam award Facebook has won in the past year. It was awarded $873 million a year ago from Adam Guerbuez and his business, Atlantis Blue Capital, who bombarded users with sexually explicit spam messages.

RAA Group now on Facebook, become a Fan

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

Facebook Become a Fan button

Facebook 101 – Some Homepage Basics – Using Facebook 4 Business

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Direct link

Facebook for business marketing

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

Direct link

Google and cloud computing bring access to vital data

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

South Florida Business Journal – by Jeff Zbar

As a Realtor, Dean Isenberg’s business survives on the flow of data to his BlackBerry Tour – and back out to his prospects.

If e-mail doesn’t come in, he could lose a listing or a showing. If he can’t submit a contract to a prospective buyer, a sale could be delayed – or lost. If an out-of-town buyer wants to see a home, often the quickest way is to send a virtual tour. Each service is available for free from one provider.

Google provides a lot of tools people don’t really know about,” said the Aventura-based Isenberg, who uses Google’s stable of free, Web-based products to run much of his business. “When the market turned, I saw a need for how to use free products to benefit my career.”

The American worker is growing increasingly connected, with smart phones and Wi-Fi Internet services. Yet, workers are only as connected as their ability to access or retrieve data from the road. Google delivers many of the services that small businesses rely on to work from “the cloud” or via a broadband Internet connection.

A growing number of companies are using free, cloud-based services to change the way they actually work. Hotmail and AOL Mail are examples of cloud computing. Some companies use free, Web-based social media, like blogging application WordPress, Facebook or Twitter, as marketing tools.

Executives at InterAir Media, a West Palm Beach-based media buying and planning firm targeting in-flight and airport media, used to e-mail clients Excel spreadsheets with details of various media opportunities, CEO Drew Stoddard said.

Earlier this month, Stoddard created his media spreadsheets for Chicago and Minneapolis in the Google Docs spreadsheet tool. He sent a link to the spreadsheet to his clients, who can collaborate in real time – with changes there for all to see, he said.

“The ability to collaborate in-house on one document at the same time, then share it with clients is fantastic,” he noted. “We can share it with them from the beginning. And it’s free. That’s the best part.”

Free tools are increasingly pervasive throughout the office. Skype, the free voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) service, provides Isenberg Web-based long-distance. Google Voice, the free telephone application, allows him to record, save as digital files or receive as transcribed documents e-mailed to his inbox any conversations and voice mail messages.

Security is strong, said Isenberg, whose company, WeTeachGoogle.com, hosts frequent seminars for Realtors, teachers and even parent-teacher organizations on using Google and online services to run small business, schools and charitable groups. Because data is stored in the cloud, a lost, stolen or damaged computer does not necessarily jeopardize data, he said.

Isenberg also scoffs at those who fear viruses or hack attacks of sensitive data coming in via the cloud.

“Encryption is more secure than in the corporate or home office,” he said.

Some remain hesitant about free, Internet-based or cloud computing. The free services often lack direct customer service, said Eric Beck, president of IT Doctors, a North Miami Beach technology consulting firm. Synchronizing online data – like contacts, e-mail or calendar – among the cloud and a BlackBerry, iPhone or other smart phone sometimes can be difficult or prone to error, he said. Moreover, when Google suffers outages, as happened for several hours earlier this month, users are left without access to e-mail, documents, calendar or any other services served up via the Internet, he said.

“If I can’t get to a document for four hours, that could be a problem,” said Beck, who instead suggests his clients either install their own service or use online “hosted exchange” services for accessing e-mail, calendar and content that can start at $10 a month. “As long as you have a good server, your stuff isn’t going to go down, and it’s all accessible.”

In Boosting Your Business, Jeff Zbar covers marketing, technology and small business strategies. Contact him at jeffzbar@gmail.com or (954) 346-4393.