Archives for the month of: December, 2007

Earlier this week, AltSearchEngines named Quintura their alternative search engine of the year.

This should be taken with a grain of salt, since Quintura is an AltSearchEngine sponsor. However, it’s worth looking at, if for nothing more than its use of tag clouds to sort through search results.

What? you say. The Web is already connected.

Well, not like it could be, according to the people working on OpenID and OAuth. Wired has the story.

What’s interesting is the first widespread testbed of OpenID/OAuth tools will be developed for WordPress, used by lots of bloggers and many major media sites.

I’ve got some thoughts percolating about what this could mean for the online news big picture, but I’m going to sleep on them first.

Mark Zuckerberg apologized for the Beacon mess yesterday, and added a way for all social ads to be turned off — at least within Facebook.

But if you logon to the site, the “Privacy Settings for External Websites” page has a rather confusing message.

Facebook External Sites Privacy Page

On the one hand, the page says, “Please note that these settings only affect notifications on Facebook. You will still be notified on affiliate websites when they send stories to Facebook. You will be able to decline individual stories at that time.”

On the other, it says, “Don’t allow any websites to send stories to my profile.”

Clarity. I’d like clarity.

Computer Associates did some more digging around today and didn’t like what they found. While the privacy announcement is a good first move, they said, data that users now assume isn’t being transmitted still is, and Facebook has not put their privacy policy into their legal notice:

The silent transmission of data about actions on third-party websites to Facebook poses a serious risk, and must be mitigated by both prominent notice to the user, and a binding commitment on Facebook’s part to handle the data properly.

Nevertheless, yesterday’s announcement seemed to placate the masses. Caroline McCarthy at CNet News got some Beacon partner reaction.

Personally, I think what caused so many problems for Facebook’s Beacon launch was arrogance and perhaps greed. They’ve been through the privacy riot before, when news feeds were first introduced. They could have done better, it’s true. But given their past experience, they should have done better by putting their users, and not their advertising partners, first.

  • David Pogue is my hero. Especially today when he posted about writers using search engine results to prove a point.
  • Rex Sorgatz has been compiling a list of 2007 lists.
  • Forget generic mobile websites. CBSNews.com launched a site for the iPhone. Nice.
  • Media Circus has a few short interviews with British journos about how they became specialists.
  • Jim Wayne at OJR shares notes and quotes from a presentation by Webfather Tim Berners-Lee. That’s Sir Tim to you.
  • Book review sections are disappearing from newspapers. Does anyone care? On the Media talks with Steve Wasserman, ex-LA Times.
  • The Million Book Project contains more than 1.5 million entries. Just think of the search interface possibilities.
  • An infographics oldie but goodie: Richard Saul Wurman Understanding USA

Ah, flu season. Today, the New York Times reported reasons why the flu spreads more easily in winter. (WebMD ran a shorter story on the same topic in late October.)

By coincidence, the AP reported a story about flu vaccines being ruined by improper storage.

Since the flu shorts are top of mind — National Influenza Vaccination Week ended Sunday, you know — now might be a good time to think about health-related tools, such as a local map of who’s sick and where; where to get a vaccinated, who to turn to for answers and even a database on what local clinics have reported spoiled vaccines.

Just a thought.

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