Archive for 'Social Networking'

Traveling food carnivals on Twitter

I met up with the Fojol Bros, (and snapped this pic of) DC’s newest and most buzz-worthy street food option, on Memorial Day at the Navy Memorial during the parade.  I had wanted to partake in their served-from-a-carnival-on-wheels Indian food for a while but never seemed to match their schedule.  The timing was perfect.

I wouldn’t have found them if it hadn’t been for their Tweets.  They communicate with fans by announcing their location on Twitter, and they were right around the corner.  They move through DC blaring music, donned in kitschy outfits and looking nothing like an authority on anything Indian.  But the food is great, the utensils are biodegradable and the price is right.

Fojol Bros on TwitterI snapped the photo above with one hand while holding a cup of chicken masala in my left, posted it to Flickr! and got a note from the Bros.  They sent it out to some press and it wound up here, in the August issue of DC Magazine.

They’re definitely seizing the power of social networking to build a scrumptious business model.  Follow them at @fojolbros and fojol.com.

What is it with blindfolds?

BlindfoldI posted a photo to Flickr on Saturday from a friend’s surprise birthday party.  A blindfold was being tied to her head so that she could swing at the piñata.  Easy enough.

Two days later, the photo has 200 views and 7 users have marked it as a favorite.  Now, either this is a truly remarkable photo that is deserving of its attention, or there is something else afoot.

I’m going with the latter.  I’m no Ansel Adams and none of my photos have been favorited by seven people.
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Hillary Wakes Up to Facebook

Hillary Clinton's Facebook applicationIn what could be called the slowest response to the Facebook community yet, Hillary Clinton finally got her own Facebook application today, 6 days before what is arguably her most critical step in the primaries…and it’s not even from the campaign.

The “Go Hillary” application is designed to unite Hillary supporters, recruit them to sign up more supporters, contribute, make calls, host events and compete with each other for points based on their activism.  Unfortunately, the application is probably too late to have any real impact on the primaries.

Obama has over 640,000 supporters on Facebook, while Clinton pulls in 125,000.  The lack of support could be a result of low youth support in general, but is no doubt aided by the lack of opportunities to funnel the youth support online.  Obama’s application has a Digg-like rating system of news, videos and other Obama tidbits.  It also places a nice box on supporters’ profiles indicating their support of the candidate.  Clinton’s doesn’t appear to do any such thing, at least for this user.

In this case, once again, Obama is the Mac and Clinton the PC.  Too bad, for such a great candidate.

via techPresident

Obama Capitalizes on Will.i.am’s Creation

A great example of a campaign capitalizing on the creativity of its supports comes in the form of Will.i.am’s music video remix of Barack Obama’s victory speech in the South Carolina primary. The video, released Friday by the creators, was emailed to the campaign by Michelle Obama Monday night.

It has over 2 million views (at last count of the several iterations floating around) and continues to spread. It’s a catchy, moving creation from talented artists that equate Obama’s speech and message with song and lyrics.

What is great for the campaign is that the saw the quality of the video, the positive response and the potential for their polling numbers. They sent the video around, being sure to note that it was a “supporter created video,” and sat back to watch the latest viral video take even further flight. Well done, BO.

Chris Matthews Says Youth Leading the Vote?

Chris Matthews just said on MSNBC that “it is inspiring to see that the young people are leading much of the vote in this election, influencing their parents and others that they should get up and support their candidate.  How wonderful it is to see the youth so involved.”  I wonder how much of that was a result of their use of the Internet to bolster their own feelings of support for a candidate enough so much to convey that message to their elders?

Live in Yahoo’s Fishbowl

Word on the street is that Yahoo! will launch its own lifecasting service next month. Yahoo! Live will be the first lifecasting service from a major Internet company, to join the small group of niche sites, Ustream.tv, Justin.tv, etc.

A posting on Yahoo’s intranet explained the concept:

Yahoo! Live is social TV, where you’re the star! Create your own social broadcasting experience. Start by broadcasting yourself from your webcam, invite your friends to chat with you, they’ll go live with you, and you’re all on candid camera!

Can you imagine the candidates signing up for this? BO’s Life, Billary Unplugged, Walnuts.tv Ah, the hilarity.

via Valleywag

R.I.P. Anonymity?

“Guest” commenters, anonymous users, pseudonyms and pedophiles beware, your anonymity on the Internet is hanging in the balance. If family watch groups, state attorneys general and MySpace haters get their way, your true identity will be headlined next to everything you do.

The latest battle in the war on anonymity was waged on January 14 when MySpace and 49 state attorneys general released a set of privacy principles for online social networks. The majority of the release implements positive new systems in MySpace that liken it to Facebook, with separate networks for high schoolers, restrictions on changing one’s age, mandatory privacy restrictions for minors, etc.

Unfortunately, the movement doesn’t stop there. It continues forward and mandates the creation of a nationwide database to store the email addresses of minors. If parents don’t want their children to participate in online social networking, they can submit their child’s emails and they’re forever blocked from joining. Clearly a shallow promise from MySpace to keep regulators at bay, this measure is foiled in 30 seconds with the creation of a second email address unknown to the rebel child’s parents. Wonder if they thought about that. What’s more important here is how certain groups are advocating for the complete elimination of anonymity on the Internet.

Making MySpace safer for youngins’ is an important mission. MySpace’s previous efforts at “privacy” have been laughable. The site has operated as an unregulated assembly of disjointed, standards-less HTML pages without providing a shred of confidence to users that the page they’re looking at is genuine. Any step towards allowing users to segment themselves into networks and restrict access to their profiles is laudable. For example, to be a part of the high school network, you must be invited by at least two other high schoolers. This prevents skeezy old men from just joining on their own, unless of course they’re already holding two other high schoolers captive in their closet.

But, when sites like MySpace start verifying someone’s identity with a national database, it creates enormous problems for anonymity on the Internet. An article in USA Today advocated for such a measure in response to MySpace’s announcement. True, if no one could be anonymous, we wouldn’t have the problem of 55 year old men pretending to be 15, we wouldn’t have slanderous edits to Wikipedia. But, we also wouldn’t have whistleblower websites that reveal dark secrets about bad employers, we wouldn’t have honest discussions about sensitive issues, we wouldn’t have Lonelygirl15 or countless other web personalities that have thrived on their anonymity. The web would become regulated and secure, sterile and developed. It would be the closing of the wild frontier. The eccentricities of the web would be lost.   Unfortunately, many of the people advocating for large-scale regulation and age verification from a national database just don’t understand quite how the Internet works.