Entries in business (3)

Tuesday
Dec222009

Web War: Contemporary content battles and the future Web

UPDATE: in defense of Demand Media

Demand Media May Be Bad for Social Media, but Not for Journalism

The history of the Internet is being re-written so quickly it makes the future web a constantly moving target, even for the simple question “how will we access general information?”

 

(you really expect me to give up and go home?)

Overshadowing this issue is the way search engines crawl the Internet and rank pages on relevance. Google and Bing seem to be the two left standing. I remember having to sift through pages of AltaVista results back in the day

Search engines can be considered your primary filter for the Internet; but as they are bombarded with new content from “Content Farms” they — or we — must adapt. Some think “social search” will become the new primary filter, creating ad-hoc “ambient feeds.” These feeds would use human filtering to fight search engines defeated by 1) “SEO” gaming, or 2) drowning in a sea of mediocre content.

I already use Google reader, Twitter and FriendFeed for much of my content discovery; search engines are most useful when I need references for a topic I’m writing about.  However, it’s hard to imagine this solution working for the vast majority — who don’t “stay on top of” breaking news, and are happy enough with answers returned from any old portal like Yahoo.com or Ask.com.

Completely separate from yet completely bound up with the issue is business and profit, open collaboration and community and social issues, online public libraries and access to educational resources. Many blogs are profitable and growing, where news organizations are failing; some by federation and streamlining, some by ad revenue and huge traffic numbers. Some have started down the road of quantity over quality, and often echo each other, especially in the tech sector. This isn’t nearly as large a problem as that presented by “Content Farms” however.  The number of “hot stories” in the tech sector is a drop in the ocean compared to the number of different search engine queries at any given moment. The latter is what “Content Farms” aim to capture.

(if you don’t accept our low buyout offer, we will bury you until dead)

“Moderated collaboration or curated knowledge gardens”:

“Content farms”:

(don’t let this happen to you)

Required reading

(live to fight another day)

Still images from 300 (film) Imdb link

Related Post: Expert Village Advanced Piano vs. Lang Lang with Orange

Friday
Dec042009

This week in startups #30 with Annie Duke (Jason Calacanis)

This “bonus” episode of This Week in Startups (TWiST) is an almost three-hour conversation between Jason Calacanis and Annie Duke. This is an atypical episode in that Duke is a professional poker player — not your average CEO.

Episode link

Another bonus episode of TWiST – and Jason’s guest is the world’s best female poker player, Annie Duke!  Annie has one over $3,000,000 in tournaments, won the World Series of Poker and is a noted writer, blogger, philanthropist and TV personality (she was recently on Season 2 of “Celebrity Apprentice“).  Most impressively, she’s managed to turn her hobby of playing poker into a full on career and brand.  Plus, she’s launching her own startup soon, but its probably not what you’d expect.

The conversation topics include traditional and online gambling, gambling media, tournament gambling, internet poker, mathematics, probability, statistics, psychology, critical thinking, skill vs. luck, result analysis, “tilt”, ethics, legislation, economics, politics, RICO act, “Betting” vs. gambling, cheating, brand issues, legal issues and twitter.

Calacanis played in the World Series of Poker recently, and has said he wants to “go pro”; his current job as CEO is “exhausting.”

Duke was discouraged from being the “smart girl” by her mother, so she focused on a liberal arts education. Thankfully, she later found an enjoyable and very profitable way to benefit from her innate “math geek” nature.

 

Saturday
Oct032009

Leo Laporte speaks at Online News Association

via TheNextWeb:

…Leo discusses how advertisers are no longer willing to pay a fortune to reach a mass audience, but rather need to focus on a small, highly targeted audience.

Laporte said he now has costs of $350,000 a year with seven employees. However, he has revenue of $1.5 million, and that revenue is doubling annually.

Online News Association

Live-blogging notes on the talk by Suzanne Yada