Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts

Monday, October 25, 2010

Big Brother or Rapleaf?

Online Tracking Company RapLeaf Profiles Users by Name - WSJ.com

This article, while not specifically for desis, shows how easy it is for companies to track your online, and target their ads to your profile. In the early days of the Internet and e-commerce, tons of companies were formed and funded, just to attract "eyeballs", with the carrot being an incentive, like money or gifts, for people to share their personal information.





But today, most of those sock-puppet touting companies do not exist - but online tracking tools have become much more sophisticated than just cookies...and with the advent of social networking, openID and geo-apps, its easier than ever to track the online and physical movement of a person who has given access to these apps.


As a test, I checked my profile at Rapleaf.com - it pegged me as a 65+ year old male, interested in blogging and non-profits, homeowner, right income range, and interested in online auctions! Not all of it is true, which leads me to beleive that this is a work in progress - but has the potential to build detailed personal dossiers.

There is an opt-out option too, for those who don't want to receive targeted online ads...but your footprints are out there...



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Sunday, October 10, 2010

Twitter, Facebook, and social activism

Twitter, Facebook, and social activism : The New Yorker

A very interesting article, in which Malcolm Gladwell asks the question about the contribution of social networking to social change - and tries to compare the Twitter revolutions in Moldovia and Iran to the genesis of the civil rights movement in Greensboro, NC in 1960.


An example - does having 1,000 "friends" on facebook mean that these 1,000 would help you drive social change? Gladwell states that The Save Darfur Coalition has 1.2 million members on facebook, but the average donation only comes out to 9 cents per person...


There have been quite a few responses to Gladwell's article - for example, "If the Internet didn’t exist, Barack Obama would not be president of the United States,” says Ben Rattray, the founder of Change.org. “The fact that the most powerful person in the world wouldn’t be in that position without the Internet and organizing online says something.”

The power of the Internet in Obama’s case, Rattray says, was its unique ability to organize thousands of passionate people to work together for change. While 100,000 people ranting on Twitter might not be worth anything, organizing those 100,000 people in a simultaneous action can have a significant impact.

Although e-petitions, Change.org’s most common advocacy tool, might top the list of low-commitment activism in some minds, Rattray says that the organization wins a campaign — changes an unjust law, policy, or practice — at least once a week. But he also admits this is probably not the most dramatic method of activism out there..."


All in all, a great question, and very thought provoking...







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Tuesday, August 3, 2010

The Female Factor - Fighting for Safe Passage on Indian Streets - NYTimes.com

Blank Noise, Walk the Night (similar to Reclai...Image via Wikipedia
The Female Factor - Fighting for Safe Passage on Indian Streets - NYTimes.com

Very interesting and much needed. Movements like Blank Noise, Gulabi Gang, Pink Chaddi have been around for decades, but have gained prominence recently because of the popularity of social media like facebook in India.

"For Ms. Patheja, the artist behind Blank Noise, breaking the silence has been healing, even empowering.
“Today I think I am far less angry, or aggressive towards the issue, yet am unapologetic about my presence on the street,” she said.
In India, thousands of women like her are becoming Action Heroes. We may not yet be ready to take back the night. But we are making a start on taking back the street..."
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