Apr
11
2009
An anonymous reader alerts us that an outfit called Magpie is paying Twitter users to tout advertisers’ products. Marshall Kirkpatrick of ReadWriteWeb has identified a number of household-name companies — among them Apple, Skype, Kodak, Cisco, Adobe, Roxio, PC Tools, and Box.net — whose products are hyped by identically worded, paid Magpie tweets. But comments to Kirkpatrick’s post, including one from a Box.net spokesman, make it sound likely that these shills were paid for not by the companies themselves, but by affiliate marketers. That may not matter. In the same way that Belkin recently got burned paying consumers to write complimentary online reviews about the company’s products, the makers of products and services touted through Magpie may find themselves tainted in the backlash from this new form of astroturfing. Kirkpatrick concludes his post: “So there’s the Twitter-sphere for you! Bring on ‘real time search,’ bring on a globally connected community, bring on vapid, vile, stupid shilling. It all seems pretty sad to me.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Paid Shilling Comes to Twitter | tags: Apple, consumers, google, news, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Comments Off on Hundreds of tips pour in about missing Ontario girl – CTV.ca | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Comments Off on US navy stalks Somali pirates – Reuters | tags: cap, google, news, obama | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Comments Off on BBC News, Bangkok – BBC News | tags: 3G, democrats, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
TheOtherChimeraTwin writes “I’ve been getting spam from mainstream companies that I do business with, which is odd because I didn’t give those companies my email address. It is doubly strange because the address they are using is a special-purpose one that I wouldn’t give out to any business. Apparently knotice.com (‘Direct Digital Marketing Solutions’) and postalconnect.net aka emsnetwork.net (an Equifax Marketing Service Product with the ironic name ‘Permission!’) are somehow collecting email addresses and connecting them with postal addresses, allowing companies to send email instead of postal mail. Has anyone else encountered this slimy practice or know how they are harvesting email addresses?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Spam Replacing Postal Junk Mail? | tags: email, google, network | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
theodp writes “How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice, practice, practice. Then, audition on YouTube. When a 10-year-old Hannah Tarley asked to get her ears pierced, her mom told the aspiring violinist she could if she performed at Carnegie Hall. Seven years later, using a computer placed atop several volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 17-year-old Hannah filmed herself playing Brahms’ Symphony No. 4 to audition by video for the YouTube Symphony Orchestra. On April 15, Hannah will make her debut with others who made the cut at New York City’s Carnegie Hall in a concert conducted by Michael Tilson Thomas, music director of the San Francisco Symphony.”

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Comments Off on YouTube Symphony Orchestra Set To Debut At Carnegie Hall | tags: google, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
perkonis writes “So, you’ve got 23,000 nukes laying about and no one to use them on. What to do with them? Well, you blow up stuff for fun and profit. Some of the ideas range from good on paper (such as mining oil shale) to just downright bad (such as making a new Panama Canal). Making a big ditch by blowing up nukes — what could possibly go wrong?”

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Comments Off on Better Living Through Nukes? | tags: google | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Death Metal writes with this excerpt from a story about COBOL’s influence as it approaches 50 years in existence: “According to David Stephenson, the UK manager for the software provider Micro Focus, ‘some 70% to 80% of UK plc business transactions are still based on COBOL.’ … Mike Gilpin, from the market research company Forrester, says that the company’s most recent related survey found that 32% of enterprises say they still use COBOL for development or maintenance. … A lot of this maintenance and development takes place on IBM products. The company’s software group director of product delivery and strategy, Charles Chu, says that he doesn’t think ‘legacy’ is pejorative. ‘Business constantly evolves,’ he adds, ‘but there are 250bn lines of COBOL code working well worldwide. Why would companies replace systems that are working well?'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on COBOL Turning 50, Still Important | tags: developer, google, IBM | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Comments Off on Thailand Evacuates Leaders from Asian Summit After Protests – Voice of America | tags: 3G, google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Comments Off on Search grows wider for Woodstock girl – Toronto Star | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news