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Friday, June 12, 2009

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If you want to promote a program, an opportunity, a website or a blog that is related to Social media, social networking  is the place for you to do it.

Social touch gets between 1,200 to 1,600 unique visitors daily. About 95% of the visitors are from Google search engine. These Google visitors have real interest to know social news. They are actively searching for social media news, SEO and social networking. The rest of the 5% are bloggers and webmasters.


If you have question on any of the advertising options or like to reserve a spot, please email me at:

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Friday, May 1, 2009

11 Green Social Networks You Should Know


It feels so good to be talking web 2.0 again. What’s going to be the viral element that gets us to cut down on our collective carbon emissions? If we knew for sure, we’d be off building it, but these 11 web sites think they have the key ingredients to motivate their users to fight global warming and cut carbon. Do you think they have what it takes? Here’s our thoughts and our list of 11 green social networks you should know:

Carbonrally.com: When Jason Karas thought up Carbonrally in mid-2007, his idea was to capitalize on the desire to compete. He launched the site in mid-November and after 5 months says he has almost 2,000 active users and has had 20,000 visitors. Unlike a lot of the sites out there, Carbonrally doesn’t focus on raising or donating money or using carbon calculators, instead it uses the draw of being on a team to help members focus their efforts on challenges that reduce carbon emissions.

Zerofootprint.net: Zerofootprint is one of the startups that actually seems to have a sustainable business model. Funny that it’s also one of the few that’s a nonprofit.

MakeMeSustainable.com: As the name suggests, this site is basically a personal workout to reduce your carbon footprint. The “Manager” section monitors your carbon emissions over time via “actions” you’ve taken like “Joining a carpool” or ‘Installing better power management on your PC.” Then there’s a social-networking component where you can join user-created groups and see who’s involved in the site in your local area.

Celsias.com: Celsias used to be a blog we read regularly, but in January it also became a social network community site for climate change-fighting advocates. Celsias organizes its community around “Projects” that users can create and join. Right now, a good deal of the projects are organizations or companies promoting themselves, and they don’t seem to add that much value to the community aspect. To build community, the site should provide its users with better ways to interact with the projects and to take more advantage of web features.

Change.org: The do-gooder social network, launched by Ben Rattray in February 2007, offers a variety of philanthropic actions to focus on, but highlights several green projects like “End Dependency on Oil,” and “Stop Global Warming.” Rattray tells us that the site has just over 110,000 users, is growing at about 4,000 new members a week, and the team is currently preparing for a major relaunch over the summer. (Also take a look at Rattray’s slide show presentation on peer-to-peer fundraising at a convention).

WorldCoolers.org: WorldCoolers is a browser add-on made by marketing company Collactive that alerts you to news and announcements on global warming. The site also has a section for online campaigns and a blog that was in hiatus for about a year. The site design could be a lot better and we wish the app itself did something more interesting than alerts.

BigCarrot.com: Are cash prizes the answer to the world’s problems? BigCarrot.com; is looking to turn the trend of offering prizes for innovations (such as the Auto X Prize and Virgin Earth Challenge) into a distributed community project. Individuals can pool their resources into a cash offering, which they can then doll out for goals like bringing greywater recycling systems to communities or building a language-teaching web app.

Care2.com: Care2 is an example of a mainstream green community site that got in on the Internet’s do-gooder focus way early — it was launched back in 1998. And thus it’s been able to bring in a sizable user base over that period of time. The site claims to have 8 million members, and Compete says it has 1 million unique visitors. It’s definitely got the look and feel of a ’90s style internet portal. We’re thinking the site is in need of a serious redesign, though it does have some more modern features like a digg-style news ranking.

2People.org: 2 People is another site that’s been around a few years and needs a serious redesign. It gets its name from the motto: “How do you move a nation: 2 People.” The only thing we really like about the site is that its trying to organize people around climate policy, through its “Focus the Nation - Climate Dialogues” and “Climate Elections 2008″ initiatives. Getting people motivated around climate policy and education is crucial, particularly this year.

BeGreenNow.com: While this site is a little sparse on innovation, it was created by Austin, Texas-based clean-electricity provider Green Mountain Energy, so it’s interesting to see how companies are using green community sites to market themselves. It’s got a carbon calculator and ways to offset your carbon emissions. GigaOM writer Stacey, who’s based in Austin, says Green Mountain seems to be losing a bit of popularity in her area, so marketing like this must be one of its strategies to grow its business.
Eco friendly, green community, Social Networking

FiveLimes.com: it doesn’t really function like your typical social network, meaning it doesn’t feel like it’s all about your profile instead it focuses more on recommending and bookmarking eco-products. It’s kind of like del.icio.us meets facebook meets the green community. Del.icio.us in that you can bookmark products and share them with people, Facebook in that you can make friends and connect to other people, and the green community because well because it focuses on products that are eco-friendly. It works by just bookmarking products that you like and adding them to the FiveLimes database under different categories like Apparel, Cosmetics, Food, etc for people to search through.
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Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Green Store

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Top social networking sites in India

ComScore, Inc., a leader in measuring the digital world has released a report on the top social networking sites in India, finding that visit to the site category increased 51 percent from the previous year to more than 19 million visitors in December 2008.

The study also found that global social networking brands continued to gain prominence in India during the year, with Orkut, Facebook, hi5, LinkedIn and MySpace each witnessing significant increases in visitation.

Indian software developers prefer Orkut
"Social networking continued to grow strongly in India this past year, with several of the top global brands carving out a more prominent position," said Will Hodgman, comScore executive vice president. "While there is certainly room for several players in the social networking space in India, the sites that have the right blend of having both a strong brand and cultural relevance will be best positioned for future growth."

Orkut tops list of social networking sites in India
Orkut reigned as the most visited social networking site in December 2008 with more than 12.8 million visitors, an increase of 81 percent from the previous year.

Orkut's audience was three times the size of its nearest competitor in the category. Facebook.com captured the #2 position with 4 million visitors, up 150 percent versus year ago, followed by local social networking site Bharatstudent.com with 3.3 million visitors (up 88 percent) and hi5.com with 2 million visitors (up 182 percent).

India favors social networking, with nearly half (48.9 percent) of all traffic going to social networks. The top 10 sites in India are as follows:

www.orkut.com
www.google.com
in.m.yahoo.com
www.peperonity.com
gallery.mobile9.com
www.mocospace.com
www.160by2.com
www.mobango.com
www.itsmy.com
www.indianrail.gov.in


"The mobile Web is also the social Web," said Jon von Tetzchner, Chief Executive Officer, Opera Software. "With social networks dominating Opera Mini's traffic, it is clear that people use their mobile browser as yet another communication tool on their phone. I find it reassuring to see that there is decreasing distinction between the types of Web content people use on the mobile device - it really is one Web, with people using whichever device they choose to connect to that Web."

Data in the report is based on aggregate and anonymous statistics from Opera Mini servers. All percentages are based on a snapshot of the Top 100 sites for each region.

Beyond providing a snapshot of worldwide browsing trends, Opera's "State of the Mobile Web" highlights the browsing trends in the ten countries where Opera Mini is most popular: the United States, Russia, China, Indonesia, India, United Kingdom, Germany, Poland, South Africa and Ukraine. Subsequent reports will include updates for these countries as well as different regions around the world.
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Saturday, March 7, 2009

Social networking could change world


The tools of "Web 2.0" – the community-driven web – can change the world, a meeting heard this week.

Delegates at the Terra future conference in London were told that social networks can really make a difference and Barack Obama's election campaign believes the notion.

Last year, tech guru Tim O'Reilly, founder of O'Reilly Media, defied the Web 2.0 community to give something more productive than the ‘useless’ Facebook applications.

Now, at this week's conference, UK-based social media consultant Chris Thorpe pointed out that just a month after O'Reilly''s call, the Obama election campaign launched the Obama '08 iPhone application.

The application organised and prioritised contacts in key battleground states, "making it easy (for campaigners) to reach out and make an impact quickly", reported New Scientist.

Thorpe told the conference about a number of other networking sites that might satisfy O'Reilly's challenge.

Accesscity, for example, is a social networking site through which a community of Londoners is helping to identify the simplest routes across the city for those with mobility issues – be it pushing a baby buggy to carrying heavy bags.
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Thursday, February 5, 2009

MySpace removes 90,000 sex crooks


Famous Social networking site MySpace announced it had identified and removed about 90,000 registered sex offenders from its site in the last two years.

The figure was almost double the number the company had originally estimated last year.

Roy Cooper, the North Carolina attorney general who is leading US efforts to improve safety on social networking sites, said the figures came as no surprise.

"These sites were created for young people to communicate with each other," he said. "Predators are going to troll in these areas where they know children are going to be. That's why these social networking sites have the responsibility to make their sites safe for children."

Cooper said that MySpace and its rival Facebook – which together claim to have more than 280 million users – had to "do more to protect children and teenagers".

He and Connecticut attorney general Richard Blumenthal co-lead a taskforce on social networking. They received assurances last year from MySpace and Facebook about tougher security, and both sites implemented dozens of safeguards, including finding better ways to verify users' ages, banning convicted sex offenders from the sites and limiting the ability of older users to search members under 18.

Blumenthal, who received MySpace's updated numbers yesterday through a subpoena, said the information "provides compelling proof that social networking sites remain rife with sexual predators". He added that while Facebook had yet to respond to a recent subpoena, a preliminary search showed the number of sex offenders using the site was "substantial".

MySpace executives said they were confident in the technology they use to find, remove and block registered sex offenders. The company uses Sentinel SAFE, a database it created in 2006 with the names, physical descriptions and other identifiable characteristics of sex offenders that cross-references against MySpace members.

"Sentinel SAFE is the best industry solution to ensure these offenders are removed from social networks," said a spokesman yesterday.

MySpace, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, says it has more than 130 million active users worldwide.

A spokesman for Facebook, which claims to have more than 150 million active users, said that protecting them has always been a priority.

"We have a policy prohibiting registered sex offenders from joining Facebook," said a spokesman. "We are glad to be able to report that we have not yet had to handle a case of a registered sex offender meeting a minor through Facebook. We are working hard to make sure it never happens."

According to Cooper, however, much more still needs to be done: "Technology moves forward quickly, and it's important for these companies to stay ahead of the technology. And they're not moving fast enough for us."

He and Blumenthal called for tougher restrictions on people joining social networking sites.

The British government is currently looking at how to protect young internet users following a report on the subject last year by psychologist Dr Tanya Byron.
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Facebook to sell user data to market research firms

Facebook intends to capitalize on the wealth of information it has about its users by offering its 150 million-strong customer base to corporations as a market research tool.

The appearance, later this year, of corporate polls targeted at certain parts of the Facebook audience because of the information they have posted on their pages, is likely to infuriate privacy campaigners.

Mark Zuckerberg, the company's 24-year-old founder and chief executive, showed the audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos how the social networking site could be used to poll specific groups of users.

He asked users in Palestine and then Israel about peace issues before relaying the results back to the audience within minutes. He also polled more than 100,000 American users of the website, asking them whether they thought President Obama's fiscal stimulus package would be enough to resurrect the economy. Two out of five said it was not enough.

Giving consumer brands the chance to use such a wide audience to get a quick response to targeted questions would do away with, or at least reduce their reliance on, expensive and time-consuming focus groups.

Speaking to well known tech blogger Robert Scoble at the event, Zuckerberg said 2009 will be Facebook's "intense" year as it tries to justify some of the mammoth valuations that have been placed upon it by making some serious revenues through advertising. He was even seen sporting a tie, a sartorial extra which the Harvard drop-out has so far eschewed.

He added the company has been experimenting with analysis of user sentiment, tracking the mood of its audience through what they are doing online. Such information is potentially very interesting to large brands, which are always seeking to measure what their customers think about their own or competitors' products.

Facebook's advertising technology already allows advertisers to choose which sort of customer will see their display adverts when they log on to the site. Advertisers can choose from such categories as where the user is located and their age and gender, based upon what the user has uploaded on to Facebook - which is adding about 450,000 new users a day.

Last year, Facebook launched its Engagement Ads tool, which allows advertisers to publish a poll on people's home pages. They are then able to see how their friends and other Facebook users have voted. The polls, which can include actions such as watching and rating a movie trailer, are being tested by companies including AT&T and CareerBuilder.com.

The American recruitment website last night (1FEB) used its trial Facebook polls to ask people what they thought of the advert that was played during the coverage of the 43rd Super Bowl. The first widespread use of polls is expected in the spring.

Facebook also has a tool called Facebook Lexicon, which is a bit like Google Trends, in that it allows users to track what topics are being discussed by people on Facebook. While Google Trends uses the search terms that are entered into its site, Facebook Lexicon looks at one of the most visible parts of a user's profile page - their wall, where people and their friends exchange public messages. It provides a searchable database of trends over time, showing how the incidence of particular words or phrases has increased or decreased in wall posts.

Facebook Lexicon shows that the company already has a significant database of user information which it could exploit and the tools are in place to allow companies to use its information for market research purposes.
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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Facebook removes Jihadist group’s page


Facebook has shut down a fast growing jihadist group, after it received an alert that the group was using the site to spread its radical message.

The group called the Fursan Ghazawat Alnusra, which is Arabic for “Knights in Support of the Invasion”, was blocked on December 18 evening after its membership grew to about 120 in just more than one week.

The group’s motto or teaching to its members was to wage “Jihad to aid the religion of Allah and his Prophet.”

The discovery was made by FoxNews.com, which after working closely with a former radical Muslim, who is presently dedicated to exposing cyber terror activity, gained access to the group and its content.

The group had written that its purpose was “to support Jihad and Mujahideen”, and that it started the Facebook group “to invade this Web site” and to ask “Allah to grant us Jihad and martyrdom.”

The members of the group brazenly posted profile photos to identify themselves, and they included well-known members of Al Qaeda's leadership as well as prominent Saudi clerics.

Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt said:”The group had been disabled, and that the company was investigating the group's ‘friends’ and might take further action. We had taken steps to terminate the content supporting terrorism. Today we invade your sites, tomorrow your lands and homes, o you cross worshippers”.
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Saturday, November 15, 2008

Want to earn online $10.00 per day


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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Add to Technorati Favorites
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