data.insights.ideas


A systematic approach to all things Internet and how we, as information hunters, interact across the Web via data, insights and ideas. Made in NYC.

@daveambrose presents di^2 | data.insights.ideas
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“That would put the price of Facebook at $3.75 billion.”

Microsoft’s Facebook stake influenced ConnectU case | Tech news blog - CNET News.com



Tags: Facebook

July 03, 2008, 1:12pm

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“I.B.M. uses a Facebook-like site called Beehive and a personalized internal directory called Profiles. These help build trust levels with peers in order to get a job done much faster, and they easily locate experts in a particular subject. I share and update big files with a file sharing system that cuts down on the back-and-forth of sending big presentations and video files.”

Preoccupations - I Freed Myself From E-Mail’s Grip - NYTimes.com



June 29, 2008, 4:40pm

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It has finally arrived: Authoritas: One Student’s Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era.

It has finally arrived: Authoritas: One Student’s Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era.



June 23, 2008, 3:13pm

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“A system and method for dynamically generating a privacy summary is provided. The present invention provides a system and method for dynamically generating a privacy summary. A profile for a user is generated. One or more privacy setting selections are received from the user associated with the profile. The profile associated with the user is updated to incorporate the one or more privacy setting selections. A privacy summary is then generated for the profile based on the one or more privacy setting selections.”

United States Patent Application: 0080046976 aka Mark Zuckerberg’s Patent



June 20, 2008, 4:12pm

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“The site immediately took off. After 4,000 people signed up in the first two weeks, Zuckerberg and Saverin realized they needed help, fast. They asked Zuckerberg’s roommate Dustin Moskovitz to help, and he began to work with them, trying to launch the site at a few more colleges deemed worthy: Stanford, Columbia and Yale. Adam D’Angelo, Zuckerberg’s high school inventing partner, also chipped in to help set up databases for the new schools. Around this time, the ownership percentages were renegotiated: 65 percent for Zuckerberg, 30 percent for Saverin and five percent for Moskovitz. Zuckerberg also pulled in Chris Hughes, another roommate, to act as their spokesman. On April 13th, the team filed letters of incorporation. Zuckerberg posted his job description on Facebook as “Founder, Master and Commander [and] Enemy of the State.” The empire of the nerds had begun.”

The Battle For Facebook : Rolling Stone



Tags: Facebook

June 14, 2008, 7:50pm

Does Slide’s Realization Equate to an Upcoming Facebook Application Recession?

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“Alas… much the same way that one year into the journey Facebook is no closer to developing a business model, Slide now realizes that a Facebook-obsessed distribution strategy is folly… and a Facebook-centric monetization strategy is as realistic as an orgy starring Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy.” -  Ashkan Karbasfrooshan of HipMojo.com

I don’t really need to elaborate on what Ashkan wrote above (as I’ve said a Facebook-only business model is ridiculous - sadly before I started data.insights.ideas), but I’m starting to hear whispers of a Facebook application recession once the new profile design goes live July 15. It’s wildly interesting to see where the Facebook economy was in 2007 and where it is now.

Where will Slide go? Up? Down? Stagnate?

Slide: Up? Down? All-Around?



June 08, 2008, 7:21pm

On Aaron Greenspan, Facebook’s Revolution and Culture

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The phrase, “I’m CEO, bitch,” will never get old so long as I am on Facebook.

By now, the words are synonymous with Mark Zuckerberg, the iconic “founder” of the hottest social network on the block. It’s funny, though, that the common Facebook user couldn’t care less about this statement or the supposed less-than-transparent ethics of the site’s fearless leader. (For what it’s worth, I didn’t really take an interest into the back-end of Facebook until two years ago when I started studying online communities and began noticing the shift to a more social web.) As Facebook matured into a social operating system, so too did its founder and directors. Google folk are starting to come on board, with financing rounds rolling in from overseas following outposts in key markets such as London. However, we know the site is at a tipping point: a leaked internal call raised discussion around unnecessary capital expenditures, the advertising question, peaking viral channels and IPO opportunities. But behind the code, behind the “poke” lay something that is more powerful that any individual or collective space on the Web: culture.

According to John B. Thompson, a sociologist at the University of Cambridge, culture employs a “pattern of meanings embodied in symbolic forms, including actions, utterances and meaningful objects of various kinds.” For Aaron Greenspan, these words couldn’t ring more true while at Harvard University developing the houseSYSTEM, the eventual precursor to Zuckerberg’s Facebook. As Greenspan explains in The Huffington Post:

“Whatever people may say, houseSYSTEM’s Facebook was on-line on September 19, 2003, several months before the domain name “thefacebook.com” was even registered. I wrote all of the code for houseSYSTEM myself. I invited Mark Zuckerberg to join the site, I had dinner with him, and he did end up joining. The purpose of the writing the book [Authoritas: One Student’s Harvard Admissions and the Founding of the Facebook Era] was for me to sort out how this strange series of events took place, and what I found in the process of writing was that Mark’s deceptive actions and Harvard’s twisted policies were actually quite related. If Mark stole something from someone else, too, that wouldn’t surprise me in the least.”

These “twisted policies” Greenspan describes stems from the broken system of higher education: “All around me I saw indications that many of the top young minds in the world were being trained, in essence, to study, but not to think. At best, they were strongly encouraged to build a good résumé and save the thinking for later. This mentality still exists at Harvard and elsewhere in higher education.” The actions, in this case, Zuckerberg’s deception toward Greenspan as well as the Facebook founder’s (which one?) movement to apply the code for future endeavors, is a byproduct of Harvard’s tangled administrative web, according to Greenspan. Facebook’s current iteration leaves a bad aftertaste from its humble beginnings in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Culture, therefore, manifests itself. On each side of the Facebook founder’s dilemma rests real and artificial embodiments, as expressed in Signal v. Noise. Can you guess which Face-book is “instant…[a] big bang, made of mission statements, declaration and rules” or “built over time [and] a result of action, reaction and truth”?

I’m not sure if I can.



May 14, 2008, 6:54pm

Insights: Since We're On the Topic...

Chat
  • Aston: I think Facebook is Aaron Greenspan's favorite subject.
  • Daniel: If the prospect of being a billionaire in my twenties passed me by the way it [allegedly] passed Aaron by, it'd be my favorite subject too.


May 08, 2008, 2:17pm

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No comment.

No comment.



May 04, 2008, 2:07pm

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When I saw this ad, I couldn’t help but think of this gem.

When I saw this ad, I couldn’t help but think of this gem.



April 28, 2008, 9:11pm


Cornify