Video: Personalization Favors Dying Squirrels Over Africa

I found an interesting video on Ted in which the author Eli Pariser (“The Filter Bubble”) talks about the risk of personalization on the Internet. Today search engines or news aggregators from Google to Yahoo, social networks like Facebook or even editorial websites like the New York Times personalize their content based on information they collect from users. Depending on where we live, the users we interact with or what our friends talk about, everyone of us sees different content when looking at the very same website.

Mark Zuckerberg once explained a journalist: “A squirrel dying in front of your house may be more relevant to your interests right now than people dying in Africa.”

For Pariser personalization is not necessarily a service, he sees a hidden danger behind it. “It moves us very quickly towards a world where the Internet shows us what it thinks we want to see, but not necessarily what we need to see.” This is what Pariser calls a “filter bubble” – a bubble of information tailored and filtered for a specific user (see picture below). But the user himself is not the one who decides what information he sees in his bubble and what information is eliminated, this choice is made by algorithms.

In a broadcast society gatekeepers controlled the flows of information, remembers Pariser. In the Internet age we see the Internet as a free medium, but we actually just moved “from human gatekeepers to algorithmic ones”. The problem is that algorithms don’t have the ethics that human gatekeepers have. According to him, filter bubbles bring our society back into the year 1915.

In my opinion Eli Pariser points out a very interesting and important perspective on what is usually seen as a very positive aspect of the Internet – personalization. Yet, it would be a big challenge to teach algorithms ethics… And it is probably even harder as users to try to find out ourselves, which of the 5 million search results to our queries are really relevant for us.

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Report: What Makes Silicon Valley Startups Successful

A recent study by the Kauffman Foundation shows that more than 90 percent of the job growth in the United States comes from highly scalable startups, although 90 percent of newly funded startups fail. One-year-old firms create on average nearly 1 million jobs, while ten-year-old firms create only 300,000. These results underline the importance of the startup scene. Yet there is such a lack of research going really into details about its success factors. Why is it so difficult to survive and what are the common mistakes of startups?

Well, here comes the answer: The Silicon Valley based startup blackbox just released a report about what makes startups successful. The authors Bjoern Lasse Herrmann and Max Marmer interviewed 1,000 startups and came to quite interesting results. They defined 4 stages a startup goes through and found out that those who skip one of them, are more likely to struggle.

 

The report comes with a bunch of figures and charts showing e.g. numbers of employees by stage, key challenges at a certain stage or competitive advantages. It comes to five essential findings:

  1. Don’t be afraid to change
  2. Seek out mentors
  3. Don’t look to investors for the day-to-day
  4. Get tech support
  5. Plan accordingly

To get the full report, go to startupgenome.cc or look at the infographic below! (I love infographics! ;-) )

Sources: gigaom.com, Kauffman.org

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Mobile Advertising: Specifically Designed for Tablets

As mobile media continues to grow at a stunning rate, mobile advertising plays a more and more significant role. The most interesting trigger comes from tablets, first and foremost Apple’s iPad. Google’s mobile advertising company AdMob, acquired exactly one year ago, now developed a new ad unit specifically designed for advertising on tablets. The new unit takes into account that tablets have a larger screen than other mobile devices and their touchscreen feature allows for more interactivity with the user.

In the past six months Admob’s advertising network recorded a traffic growth of 300% coming from tablets. There still lays a lot of potential in the market for mobile advertising on tablet devices. The fact that tablet owners use their devices mainly to consume media, makes it even more interesting…

Sources: googleblog.blogspot.com

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Quote: The Hole in the Groupon Model

Hole“What Facebook is to social networking, Groupon has become to email discounting.” The big hole in the Groupon model: the fact that it isn’t really social.

Mathew Ingram from GigaOM about how Facebook could beat Groupon – by actually making deals social.

Source: gigaom.com

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