Search posterous

Search all posts and users. Type a name, type a favorite song title, whatever! See what comes up.
  

More posterous blogs











More recommended blogs »

Here are posterous posts filed under googlefriendconnect...

A few years ago I tried to start a company called Anatomy Ads. We tried to create a social advertising network. This company failed as a business. You can read a lengthy post about what we did and what happened here.

But it didn't fail as a concept. Someone, somewhere, is going to invent a social ad platform that works. It's just a matter of time. What I wanted to address is everything that we did right, and why there is an even greater opporunity to do it again—and do it right.

When we started, there was a [now defunct] company called TipJoy which billed itself a "a social micropayments service." It was the closest analogue to what we were trying to create. TipJoy allowed you to leave a tip for someone else, usually a blogger or some other kind of creative person creating new media content. If you were a blogger, you'd put their widget on your site and people could leave you tips. All your readers had to do was fill out a tip amount and register their email address. TipJoy would send them an email and ask them to pay for their tip. It let people tip first and pay later. It was very simple. In a lot of ways it was a Web 2.0 version of the PayPal "Donate Now" button.

I thought it was an interesting idea immediately, but noticed there was a problem. There was no real incentive to leave a tip other than the warm fuzzy feeling you might get for doing so. Unforunately, that's not enough for most people. Leaving a tip for a blogger isn't like leaving a tip at a resturant. If you don't tip them, no one is going to spit in your food if you come back. On the web, no one even knows who you are. Moreover, it's just not customary to do so. You're asking people to change their behavior and you aren't giving them an incentive to do so.

We looked at this and thought about what might happen if we gave people a real inventive to "leave a tip". What if you gave people impressions. What if you gave them a voice on the blogs and websites they admire so much. Would that be enough? How many people would be willing to pay a dollar to get on Mashable even if they didn't know how many impressions they would get?

These were among some of the questions we tried to answer with the Anatomy Ads platform, and we ran into problems:

  • The system we created was too complicated.
  • Our widget didn't work on enough platforms.
  • We deviated away from IAB standard units. Huge mistake.
  • We forced people to create a separate login with us.

Part of what made TipJoy work at all was that it was so simple. They took the PayPal model, made it a little bit easier and more user friendly, and created a business out of it.

Simplicity is what has got me thinking about the idea of social micropayments and tipping again. Now we've got single sign-on services like Facebook Connect, Twitter OAuth, OpenID, MySpaceID and Google Friend Connect. What if you allowed people a quick way to create ads, testemonials, or leave shoutouts using Twitter and Facebook? Could you make social advertising work?

Filed under: google friend connect

gltss says...

Filed under: google friend connect

capitano says...

Google's Friend Connect has expanded its roster of social networking and social media services that participating Web publishers can add to their sites.

Friend Connect now has a new section called "Interests" that lets Web publishers pose questions to visitors who register with their sites about their likes, hobbies and preferences.

The information people provide gets added to the profiles they have set up on the publisher's site, allowing users to learn about each other's interests, Google said Wednesday.

In addition, Friend Connect has a new feature that lets Web publishers provide users the ability to send private messages to each other via their site profiles.

Web publishers will also be able to aggregate and analyze this "interests" data that people make public, and thus use it to fine-tune and tweak the site.

For example, Friend Connect now lets Web publishers create, send and manage newsletters, which can be personalized for different types of users based on their stated interests, according to Google.

Google is also making available a new gadget application that automatically packages links to a site's content based on a user's interests.

A new AdSense section lets Web publishers display ads from Google that are relevant not only to a site's topic but also to specific user interests.

Currently, about 9 million sites use Friend Connect.

Filed under: google friend connect

Filed under: Google Friend Connect

DeGeek says...

 

FROM THE GEEK:

“A distributed social network traditionally refers to an Internet social network that is decentralized and distributed across different providers, with emphasis on portability and interoperability.” --http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_social_network

TRANSLATED FROM THE GEEK:

Dude walks into a bar and orders a draft. Bartender says, “Hey, Joe, how you doin'?” Dude asks how the bartender knows him, and the bartender replies, “Your friends from Bob's Pub on 52nd come in here all the time. You want me to let the guys at the office know you're here?” “Uh, no, thanks.” Joe replies. “No problem, Joe.” says the bartender, “Here, try this new draft we have on tap - your buddy Pete raved about it!”

Most sites that allow you to share information, post comments, review stuff, etc., require you to log in to do so. These sites may already know who you are when you get there if you are already logged in somewhere else like Facebook or Google, or have what is called a universal ID like OpenID.

Say you are visiting a site that supports distributed social networking. If you have an OpenID, the site already knows certain things about you – things you allow any site to know about you, like your name or email address. You can then share the site or site content with other people in your network. You can also see how other people within your network have interacted with the site by reading their reviews, comments, and so forth – just as they will be able to see how you have interacted if they visit the same site later on.

--DeGeek

Filed under: Google Friend Connect

simplify3 says...

Google Friend Connect, the up and coming social networking service that will connect various and sundry websites together with a common social networking platform, is now White Listing a number of websites to be a part of their continuing testing phase.

 

My little Naples, FL website, http://free.naplesplus.us 

is now a part of the Google Friend Connect testing phase.  Come on by and if you look to the left panel of the site, about half way down, you'll see a Google Friend Connect thing.  (it says "Google members").  From there, you can join Google Friend Connect, use your Plaxo or Orkut or Google profiles, and set up a new type of presence on the Internet, one that will eventually link everything together.

You'll be able to find your friends, see what websites they're into, hook together in a way never possible before.  This is just the beginning stages of the process - the first teetering steps towards a very large and very necessary evolution in social networking -- meta social networking that spans across multiple websites.  MyBlogLog has come close to this goal, but hasn't quite reached it yet.  Google will do it right.  They may be the 800-lb Gorilla, but that's why it's good to be on their side :-)

 

Kenneth Udut, webmaster of http://free.naplesplus.us - Collier County FL - Naples FL News, Jobs, For Sale, Business Directory, Blogs

 

Filed under: google friend connect

El jueves escribí unas pocas líneas sobre el grafo social de Google. Hoy leo que es inminente el lanzamiento de Google Friend Connect (vía TechCrunch). Los más optimistas profetizan que empieza el fin de las redes sociales estilo walled garden y el futuro distribuido ya casi está aquí. Otros, opinan que se trata del certificado de defunción de la Dataportability.org y que Google se va a quedar con todo.

Filed under: Google Friend Connect