Dec 12, 2012

Google Zeitgeist 2012

Google Zeitgeist 2012: Google's Zeitgeist page for 2012 has a lot of lists of popular searches from different categories and from different countries, so it's easy to find the people, the events, the games, the movies, songs and gadgets that defined the year 2012. It's important to keep in mind that most lists only include the queries with "the highest amount of traffic over a sustained period in 2012 as compared to 2011", so you won't find boring queries like [games] and [music], which are popular every year.

The "movers and shakers" of the year are:

1. Whitney Houston
2. Gangnam style
3. Hurricane Sandy
4. iPad 3
5. Diablo 3
6. Kate Middleton
7. Olympics 2012
8. Amanda Todd
9. Michael Clarke Duncan
10. BBB12 (Big Brother Brasil).


If you look back at the 2011 Zeitgeist list, you'll notice that "Gangnam style" replaces Rebecca Black, iPad 3 replaces both the iPhone 5 and the iPad 2, Diablo 3 replaces Battlefield 3.

The list of popular gadgets includes 6 tablets (iPad 3, iPad Mini, Nexus 7, iPad 4, Microsoft Surface and Kindle Fire), 3 phones (Galaxy S2, Galaxy Note 2, Nokia Lumia 920) and Sony's PlayStation. With so many interesting tablets released this year, it's hard to choose which one to buy.

Sometimes, Google's lists don't make a lot of sense, so you should take them with a grain of salt. Compare these 2 lists for US tech trends (for example, Note 2 is both more popular and less popular than iPhone 5):


Download the entire Zeitgeist collection [PDF] and don't miss the cool Easter Egg that shows a "Gangnam style" Android animation: mouse over the colorful bar at the bottom of the Zeitgeist page and click the robot.


{ Thanks, Arpit. }

Google Fiber tops Netflix ISP speed rankings | TechHive

Google Fiber tops Netflix ISP speed rankings | TechHive

As YouTube renews channels, will media companies make the cut? » Nieman Journalism Lab

As YouTube renews channels, will media companies make the cut? » Nieman Journalism Lab

Dec 11, 2012

Hamas leader Khaled Meshal denounces Israel at anniversary rally in Gaza - The Washington Post

Hamas leader Khaled Meshal denounces Israel at anniversary rally in Gaza - The Washington Post

In Turkish border town, Syrian doctors and other refugees plan for new future - The Washington Post

In Turkish border town, Syrian doctors and other refugees plan for new future - The Washington Post

In S. Korea, the Republic of Samsung - The Washington Post

In S. Korea, the Republic of Samsung - The Washington Post

Gunmen kill senior women’s activist in Afghanistan - The Washington Post

Gunmen kill senior women’s activist in Afghanistan - The Washington Post

Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez arrives in Cuba for cancer surgery - The Washington Post

Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez arrives in Cuba for cancer surgery - The Washington Post

Report sees middle class growing, Islamist terrorism subsiding by 2030 - The Washington Post

Report sees middle class growing, Islamist terrorism subsiding by 2030 - The Washington Post

Facebook shuts down Taliban recruiting account

Facebook shuts down Taliban recruiting account

In ‘Zero Dark Thirty,’ she’s the hero; in real life, CIA agent’s career is more complicated - The Washington Post

In ‘Zero Dark Thirty,’ she’s the hero; in real life, CIA agent’s career is more complicated - The Washington Post

Despite turmoil, major lending effort aims to boost Egypt, Arab neighbors - The Washington Post

Despite turmoil, major lending effort aims to boost Egypt, Arab neighbors - The Washington Post

As doctors grow older, hospitals begin requiring them to prove they’re still fit - The Washington Post

As doctors grow older, hospitals begin requiring them to prove they’re still fit - The Washington Post

U.S. students continue to trail Asian students in math, reading, science - The Washington Post

U.S. students continue to trail Asian students in math, reading, science - The Washington Post

Mali's junta forces prime minister to resign - The Washington Post

Mali's junta forces prime minister to resign - The Washington Post

Twitter releases top trends of 2012 - The Washington Post

Twitter releases top trends of 2012 - The Washington Post

Morsi’s supporters, opponents rally ahead of constitutional referendum - The Washington Post

Morsi’s supporters, opponents rally ahead of constitutional referendum - The Washington Post

Postal employees accept early buyout offer

Postal employees accept early buyout offer

Israeli soldiers raid Palestinian NGO offices - The Washington Post

Israeli soldiers raid Palestinian NGO offices - The Washington Post

Logging Reporter Arrested

Logging Reporter Arrested:
Authorities in eastern Cambodia’s Kratie province have arrested a local reporter who had exposed illegal timber smuggling in the area, according to police and an anti-logging activist.
Taing Try, a reporter affiliated with the Khmer Democratic Journalists’ Association, was taken into custody on Friday, police in Kratie’s Snoul district told RFA on Sunday.
Police refused to discuss the charges against him, saying only that local villagers had reported Taing Try for illegal activities to the district prosecutor.
But Ing Savoeun, a representative from the local Anti-logging and Wildlife Protection group, said he believes Taing Try is being held in connection with timber-smuggling activities that the journalist himself had reported to local authorities.
“I see this scenario as very unjust,” he told RFA’s Khmer Service.
He said that Taing Try had uncovered illegal smuggling involving a well-connected businessman who had conducted crimes in Snoul’s Ksem township without fear of local authorities.
“Taing Try had seen the illegal transportation [of timber],” he said.
“The owner of the vehicle was Eourn … He has been doing this business for two to three years and has never paid anyone a single riel because of how powerful his backers are.”
Reporters from the Meattophum (Homeland) newspaper who know Taing Try also said they believe he was arrested because he had witnessed illegal timber smuggling and reported it to the authorities, but they did not elaborate.
Taing Try had contributed articles to the paper.
Arrest
Ing Savoeun said that on Friday, after Taing Try had reported information on timber smuggling in the Ksem township’s Sompoch village to district authorities, police came to the area and arrested the journalist along with others suspected of involvement in illegal timber smuggling.
The police, who were accompanied by the head of the local forestry department and the head of Ksem township, brought them to the local district police station, he said.
Authorities soon released the other detainees after impounding a car that belonged to one of them, but kept Taing Try in custody, he said.
District police said Taing Try was transferred to the provincial court on Saturday.
District Prosecutor Chat Soraksmeay, who issued the warrant for Taing Try’s arrest, could not be reached for comment.
Illegal logging
Taing Try’s arrest follows a pair of murders this year tied to exposing illegal logging in Cambodia’s forests, where deforestation and mining in recent years have taken a heavy toll on the environment.
In April, environmental activist Chut Wutty, who had organized communities to protect forests, was gunned down while investigating illegal logging operations in Koh Kong province.
Court proceedings on his case, the highest-profile death of a Cambodian activist in years, ended in October after judges dropped an investigation into the murder on the grounds that the suspected killer was already dead.
In September, an investigative journalist who had exposed illegal logging and forest crimes involving the local elite was found dead in his car in Rattanakiri province.
In his most recent article before his death, Hang Serei Oudom, a reporter for the local Virakchum Khmer Daily, had accused the son of a district military police chief of smuggling logs and extorting money from people who were legally transporting wood.
Reported by Vichey Ananndh for RFA’s Khmer Service. Translated by Samean Yun and Poly Sam. Written in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.

East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin - 11 Dec 2012

East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin

ICG Report - Thailand: The Evolving Conflict in the South - International Crisis Group

Thailand: The Evolving Conflict in the South - International Crisis Group

Young-adult readers may have abandoned print, but they’ll take news in their pockets » Nieman Journalism Lab

Young-adult readers may have abandoned print, but they’ll take news in their pockets » Nieman Journalism Lab

On Self-Censorship

On Self-Censorship:

Searching for clues to a mysterious blank page in the newspaper.

Bina blank page
A censored page from Pakistan's International Herald Tribune. Photo: Courtesy of the author.
One morning, as I was reading the International Herald Tribune, I turned the page to the World News section (the Pakistani edition squeezes several sections together, so “America” and “Middle East” appear on the same page). Upon opening the section I was confronted with a huge white space that took up three-fourths of the page. This had to be a story that the editors deemed too offensive or controversial for Pakistani readership, but it was still astonishing to see such stark evidence of self-censorship in a time when Pakistan’s media is declared relatively free.
  1. Pakistan is a country of contradictions – full of promise for growth, modernity and progress, yet shrouded by political, social and cultural issues that undermine its quest for identity and integrity. My bi-monthly column “Pakistan Unveiled” presents stories that showcase the Pakistani struggle for freedom of expression, an end to censorship, and a more open and balanced society.
  2. Bina Shah is a Karachi-based journalist and fiction writer and has taught writing at the university level. She is the author of four novels and two collections of short stories. She is a columnist for two major English-language newspapers in Pakistan, The Dawn and The Express Tribune, and she has contributed to international newspapers including The Independent, The Guardian, and The International Herald Tribune. She is an alumnus of the International Writers Workshop (IWP 2011).
So I went online, to the New York TimesGlobal Voices page (the International Herald Tribune is “The Global Edition of The New York Times”), to see if I could identify the offending story. The Middle East page offered no clues. Was it the story on protests in Saudi Arabia, one of Pakistan’s long-time allies? People in Pakistan are very religious, and the political arm of Saudi Arabia, Wahabiism, has staunch supporters in the country. Publishing a story about unrest in Saudi Arabia could have repercussions amongst Wahabis here. No other story looked like a possibility. Of course, sometimes the editors don’t publish stories that are heavily pro-Israel, but typically they just leave those out. I moved elsewhere to find the answer to the puzzle.
Clicking on the “America” section revealed more stories that might have been the reason for that ghostly blankness in the newspaper. On that page a story on gay conversion therapy and related lawsuits was the most likely culprit. The discussion on gay rights simply doesn’t exist in Pakistan: Homosexuals are expected to live in utter secrecy in a Pakistani version of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” Any attempt to bring the issue out into the open is met with furious protest, as the American Embassy learned, to their chagrin, when they held an LGBT-themed event in Islamabad last year. They haven’t yet lived down the backlash from that wonderful idea (and I use the word “wonderful” with a heavy dose of irony; for a superpower conducting an illegal drone war in our territory to decide to host a gay pride event in the capital had to involve a massive failure to understand sentiments on the ground).
But let me be clear: Writers are always dealing with issues of censorship; no matter what country they live and work in. Certain topics are taboo in every culture, from Holocaust denial in Europe and 9/11 conspiracy theories in the United States, to gay rights in Pakistan and political issues in China. But while governments vary in their responses to these issues— in some places with sophistication (invoking technicalities which contravene freedom of speech rights) and in others with crudeness (taking a black pen to scantily-clad women in magazines)—society has instilled self-censorship in all its members. For example, Herta Muller recently said Mo Yan’s Nobel Prize was a “catastrophe” because he toes the Communist Party line; the implicit accusation being that Mo Yan censors himself in order to remain in the ruling party’s good books. But perhaps Mo Yan truly believes in what the Communist Party espouses, and in that case, it’s not self-censorship, but self-expression, just not the kind that Herta Muller wants to hear.
In the end, one of the International Herald Tribune‘s local editors told me the answer to the puzzle: The blank page had contained an interview with Nakoula Basseley, the man behind the film Innocence of Muslims. The headline? “From the Man Who Insulted Mohammed, No Regrets.” It immediately became clear why the editors had pulled the story: Scores of people died and millions of dollars worth of property was damaged in Pakistan during violent protests against the film. Even though the interview is not sympathetic to Nakoula at all, the editors determined that the story was too controversial to carry. When done in the name of public safety, self-censorship is the hardest pill to swallow, but sometimes the most necessary medicine tastes bitterest.

Gallup - Infographic: Two Powerful Metrics for World Leaders

Infographic: Two Powerful Metrics for World Leaders

Review: Slick RSS Chrome works best as a second news reader | PCWorld

Review: Slick RSS Chrome works best as a second news reader | PCWorld

Dec 10, 2012

Twitter says everyone will get the new profile pages look as of December 12th

Twitter says everyone will get the new profile pages look as of December 12th: Screen Shot 2012 12 10 at 11.13.34 AM 520x245 Twitter says everyone will get the new profile pages look as of December 12th
Twitter has announced via its official blog that the new profile setup which includes an avatar and a header photo will be rolled out to everyone on December 12th. Previously only a subset of users had access to the new look.
The new profile look features a user’s Twitter avatar sitting on top of a wide header image. Thew new design has made headway into turning your Twitter profile into a ‘home page’ of sorts that displays media you’ve shared, tweets you’ve made and more. Those changes make it feel less like a stream of text and more like a place to collect everything you share.
Screen Shot 2012 12 10 at 11.04.56 AM 730x492 Twitter says everyone will get the new profile pages look as of December 12th
The new header photo image capability is explained by this clever video Twitter released back in November:
The new profiles were announced by Twitter on the Today Show, an interesting venue for what was arguably an incremental design change. But the shift makes sense, as the pre-profile image design already feels very ‘dry’ and data-base-ey to me when I look at it. If Twitter wants to sell itself as a media service for people, it needs to make it feel much less nerdy.
Image Credit: RODRIGO BUENDIA/Getty Images

Hacker group GhostShell claims attack on FBI, Interpol, NASA, and Pentagon, theft of 1.6M accounts

Hacker group GhostShell claims attack on FBI, Interpol, NASA, and Pentagon, theft of 1.6M accounts: leak1 520x245 Hacker group GhostShell claims attack on FBI, Interpol, NASA, and Pentagon, theft of 1.6M accounts
The hacktivist group GhostShell on Monday announced its biggest attack yet: #ProjectWhiteFox, which targets the ESA, the FBI, the Federal Reserve, Interpol, NASA, and the Pentagon, as well as many companies that partner with these organizations. The team says it has released 1.6 million accounts and records from fields such as aerospace, nanotechnology, banking, law, education, government, military, the department of defense, airlines, and more.
In a Pastebin file, GhostShell features a list of 37 organizations and companies, including The European Space Agency, NASA’s Engineers: Center for Advanced Engineering, and a Defense Contractor for the Pentagon. GhostShell sets itself apart from other hacktivist groups by targeting more than just one company or organization, and then releasing the results of its attack all at once. This set of hacks is spread out across 456 links, many of which simply contain raw dump files uploaded to GitHub and mirrored on paste sites Slexy.org and PasteSite.com.
The uploaded files contain what appears to be user data that looks to have been obtained from the servers of the various firms (likely via SQL injection). The entries include IP addresses, names, logins, email addresses, passwords, phone numbers, and even home addresses. Email accounts include the big three (Gmail, Hotmail, and Yahoo), as well as many .gov accounts. There are also various documents and material related to partnerships between companies and government bodies, as well as sensitive information for the aforementioned industries.
team ghostshell 730x296 Hacker group GhostShell claims attack on FBI, Interpol, NASA, and Pentagon, theft of 1.6M accounts
Furthermore, the group says it has sent an email to the ICS-CERT Security Operations Center, Homeland Security Information Network (HSIN), Lessons Learned and Information Sharing (LLIS), the FBI’s Washington Division and Seattle location, Flashpoint Intel Partners, Raytheon, and NASA. In it, theysay to have detailed “another 150 vulnerable servers from the Pentagon, NASA, DHS, Federal Reserve, Intelligence firms, L-3 CyberSecurity, JAXA, etc.”
GhostShell made a name for itself by breaching 100 top university servers and releasing 120,000 student records in October. In November, the group stepped up its game by declaring war on Russia and allegedly leaking 2.5 million accounts and records. Now we’re in December, and once again it has upped the ante.
The hacktivist group says this is their last project for the year and calls it “an early Christmas present.”
Image credit: Stephen Davies

Facebook absolves its democratic structure as voting falls far short of key threshold

Facebook absolves its democratic structure as voting falls far short of key threshold: 144543565 520x245 Facebook absolves its democratic structure as voting falls far short of key threshold
Facebook is shutting down its voting site in less than 20 minutes that allowed users to vote on proposed policy and site governance changes it was recommending. Currently there are over 665,000 votes cast, but they fall far short from the 30% threshold needed in order to make the changes binding. Because the vote failed to garner the required number of active voters to participate, the opinion given will be merely taken as “advisory”.
At stake are updates to the network’s Data Use Policy and the Statement of Rights and Responsibilities. Perhaps the most important part of this change is, if passed, user data could be provided to Facebook’s partners, specifically Instagram, in order to create a cohesive network similar to Google. Consumer groups have already come out opposed to this change and this update could ultimately wind up with a court deciding.
Per Facebook’s policy, all active users are encouraged to vote and had from December 3 until today at noon to cast their ballot. If more than 30% of active users participate, then the results will be binding. However, since it appears that it won’t even get that far, the company will take the feedback under advisement and can proceed with their plans to make changes to the policy, or maybe even update it to assuage any fears users may have.
Currently, there are over 586,000 votes in favor of keeping the existing policy in place with over 79,000 voting for the new updates. As Buzzfeed notes, the number of users that voted in this instance roughly matches what it was the last time Facebook ran through this exercise.
Snap 2012 12 10 at 11.40.19 730x429 Facebook absolves its democratic structure as voting falls far short of key threshold
Photo credit: PORNCHAI KITTIWONGSAKUL/AFP/Getty Images

After rapid growth, ebook readers set for collapse with shipments plummeting 36% in 2012

After rapid growth, ebook readers set for collapse with shipments plummeting 36% in 2012: 1397558 44748514 520x245 After rapid growth, ebook readers set for collapse with shipments plummeting 36% in 2012
In 2011, dedicated ebook readers saw shipments of 23.2 million units, a number that now appears to have been the peak of the ebook reader market. By the end of 2012, sales are expected to fall a whopping 36 percent to 14.9 million units.
The latest numbers come from iSuppli, which says the dedicated ebook reader market saw spectacular growth in the last few years, but is now on “an alarmingly precipitous decline.” In fact, the analytics provider says “the rapid growth—followed by the immediate collapse—of the ebook market is virtually unheard of, even in the notoriously short life cycle of products inhabiting the volatile consumer electronics space.”
The company predicts another drastic 27 percent contraction in 2013, with dedicated ebook reader shipments declining to 10.9 million units. By 2016, the dedicated ebook reader space will amount to just 7.1 million units, having lost more than two-thirds of its peak volume in 2011, according to the firm.
While these are just estimates, the trend is clear: dedicated ebook readers are going to die a quick death. After all, with tablets being able to do more than these one-trick ponies, it’s completely expected.
Yet one has to point out that Amazon just reported its biggest single day for Kindle sales ever. Right, but those include both dedicated ebook readers and multi-purpose tablets. As iSuppli notes, Amazon is converting consumers from the Kindle ebook reader to the Kindle Fire media tablet.
iSuppli also notes Amazon is more insulated than other ebook reader manufacturers because it can recoup its losses through sales generated from ebooks and other content available on its online store. In fact, that’s been the online retailer’s strategy for a while now: cut device cost to increase physical sales and hope to make money off virtual sales.
Back in September, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said his company doesn’t want to offer the “best tablet for the price” but the best tablet for “any price.” As we’ve covered before, there’s a price war going on between Amazon, Google, and Apple. The first victim looks to be the dedicated ebook reader.
iSuppli compares dedicated ebook readers to other single-task devices like digital still cameras, GPS systems, and MP3 players which also face similar pressures. The difference here is that all three of these examples were around much longer before they started to get replaced by devices that could do more than just one function.
Image credit: Kruno Knezevic

Facebook encountering DNS issues, making it unavailable for some users

Facebook encountering DNS issues, making it unavailable for some users:
Facebook has been encountering some DNS issues this afternoon that are making it unavailable to many users. The site’s Domain Name System servers are not directing folks to its site, causing it to appear as if the network is down completely.
As of this writing, it’s been down for some 20 minutes at the very least, and there are a lot of people that are pretty upset. When the DNS server (or servers) of a site begin to stop returning.
This appears to be the first major outage since October 11, when Facebook went down in several countries worldwide.
We’ve reached out to Facebook to see what the issue might be, and we’ll update this post when we hear more.

'Thousands' Held on Human Rights Day

'Thousands' Held on Human Rights Day:
Authorities in the Chinese capital have detained thousands of petitioners who converged on Beijing to mark Human Rights Day 2012 on Monday, petitioners said.

Petitioners—many of whom have spent futile years pursuing grievances through China's official complaints system-—gathered in a number of locations across the city on Monday, chanting slogans, including "Give us back our rights!"

"There were so many buses today, 50 or more; we were all packed in," said Zhao Guoli, a petitioner from the southern city of Shenzhen.

"There were two buses in front of us that had more than 100 people crammed into them."

Zhao said that many of those rounded up in the capital by police were taken to an unofficial detention center at Jiujingzhuang, on the outskirts of Beijing.

"We had to line up [for a long time] and now we are registering," she said. "They gave out some steamed buns."

Thousands held

Lin Minghao, a petitioner from the northeastern city of Shenyang, said he had arrived at Jiujingzhuang in the afternoon and had received a text message saying "the police are beating people."

Lin said he estimated that at least 5,000 people were being held in Jiujingzhuang on Monday night, judging from his count of the buses and the number of people aboard each bus.

"I reckon there were about 60 buses that arrived [at Jiujingzhuang today]. Each bus has more than 50 seats, and there were many more people standing, so that's probably 80-90 per bus," Lin said.

He said the petitioners  were being held in overcrowded rooms and denied access to food or water.

"There were more than 10 of us locked up in one room and we hadn't eaten lunch," he said.

"I shouted that I wanted a drink of water; I shouted for several hours, but no one took any notice of me."

He said local officials from his hometown had come to pick him up.

"I'll either be detained [back home], or sent to a study group, or sent to labor camp," Lin said. "It's totally inhuman."

'Redress for injustice'

A Hubei-based petitioner surnamed Yuan said she had been treated illegally, even on Human Rights Day.

"There are a lot of us locked up here who came from all across China seeking redress for injustice," she said. "This has been going on for more than a decade."

"The petitioners have been locked up, or had their houses demolished, while others are the victims of miscarriages of justice," Yuan said.

"We braved all sorts of hardship to make it to Beijing, but we were oppressed here as well, because the government doesn't care about us."

"We have no other options."

The Sichuan-based rights website Tianwang said that petitioners from all over China had converged on the area around Beijing's southern railway station in the district of Fengtai to mark Human Rights Day.

Lin said there was a strong police presence at Liangmaqiao, not far from the embassy district and the United Nations.

"At about 11.00 a.m., we arrived to complain [to the U.N.] about the lawless behavior of our local government, which arbitrarily locks people up, and illegally detains and 're-educates' petitioners," he said.

"This goes against the International Declaration of Human Rights and the international covenants on human rights, as well as the Chinese Constitution and relevant laws and regulations," Lin added.

"We are calling on the new generation of Chinese leaders to respond to the legitimate demands of petitioners."

Road blocked off

Photos supplied by petitioners showed police and judicial enforcement vehicles lining both sides of the Liangmaqiao intersection, with large numbers of uniformed police on patrol, while some parts of the road had been sealed off.

Petitioner Yi Xu'an, who has already served time in labor camp for his petitioning activities, said he had seen a group of 50-60 petitioners near the embassy district, chanting "Give us back our rights."

"They were surrounded by police," Yi said. "I was standing right there."

"There were more than 100 police vehicles, judicial vehicles, and prosecutor vehicles, many of them with license plates from all across China," he said.

"There were also cars [with no license plates at all]."

A third petitioner, who gave only his surname Liu, said the police presence was equally strong on the other side of the diplomatic district, near the third ring road.

"There were a bunch of police officers who had blocked off the pedestrian footbridge," he said. "They were asking people crossing it if they were petitioning, and if they answered yes, they would be stopped immediately."

Elsewhere in Beijing, prominent rights activists said they were currently being held under house arrest in the wake of a recent interview given by Liu Xia, who has been under house arrest since her jailed dissident husband Liu Xiaobo was announced as a Nobel peace laureate in October 2010.

'A sensitive date'

Hu Jia, a rights campaigner and close friend of the Lius, said he is currently unable to leave his Beijing apartment.

"Firstly, it probably has to do with [the Liu Xia] incident," Hu said, referring to a brief interview obtained by the Associated Press last week while Liu's guards were on their lunch break.

"Secondly, Human Rights Day is a sensitive date for the Chinese Communist Party," he said.

"A lot of petitioners come to Beijing on this day, and if they let me go out, I would definitely be down there on the front line, at the southern railway station or the national complaints office."

"Thirdly, it is the second anniversary of the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to Liu Xiaobo, and the authorities don't want me going out and meeting up with foreign journalists," Hu said.

Reported by Qiao Long and Xin Yu for RFA's Mandarin Service, and by Fung Yat-yiu for the Cantonese Service. Translated and written in English by Luisetta Mudie.

Drug Makers, Universities Team Up on Stem Cells - WSJ.com

Drug Makers, Universities Team Up on Stem Cells - WSJ.com

Dexter Filkins: How General Petraeus Turned the Tide in Iraq : The New Yorker

Dexter Filkins: How General Petraeus Turned the Tide in Iraq : The New Yorker

The Newsletter 62 Winter 2012 | International Institute for Asian Studies

The Newsletter 62 Winter 2012 | International Institute for Asian Studies

Nick Diakopoulos: Understanding bias in computational news media » Nieman Journalism Lab

Nick Diakopoulos: Understanding bias in computational news media » Nieman Journalism Lab

East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin - 10 Dec 2012

East Timor Law and Justice Bulletin

13 killer Chrome apps to replace your desktop software | PCWorld

13 killer Chrome apps to replace your desktop software | PCWorld

Dec 8, 2012

We're all clueless about privacy, FTC is told at hearing | PCWorld

We're all clueless about privacy, FTC is told at hearing | PCWorld

Nielsen survey: Social media sucking up most of our time | PCWorld

Nielsen survey: Social media sucking up most of our time | PCWorld

Exiled Hamas leader Khaled Meshal visits Gaza for first time - The Washington Post

Exiled Hamas leader Khaled Meshal visits Gaza for first time - The Washington Post

In Michigan, heart of organized labor, Republicans push to limit union power - The Washington Post

In Michigan, heart of organized labor, Republicans push to limit union power - The Washington Post

War brewing on the latest front line against terrorism in Mali - The Washington Post

War brewing on the latest front line against terrorism in Mali - The Washington Post

Egyptian president poised to grant military broader police powers - The Washington Post

Egyptian president poised to grant military broader police powers - The Washington Post

David Ignatius: Mohamed Morsi, our man in Cairo - The Washington Post

David Ignatius: Mohamed Morsi, our man in Cairo - The Washington Post

HootSuite bolsters its App Directory with Vimeo, WordPress.org and more

HootSuite bolsters its App Directory with Vimeo, WordPress.org and more: Owls 645x250 520x245 HootSuite bolsters its App Directory with Vimeo, WordPress.org and more
HootSuite has announced a slew of new additions to its App Directory, with Vimeo, WordPress.org, Via.Me, Reachli, and Scripted all now available through the social media management dashboard.
Launched in 2008, HootSuite lets users manage multiple social networks through a single dashboard, and the Vancouver-based company has grown into a global social media brand used by individuals and companies alike. Earlier this year, we reported that HootSuite had released its Engagement API and reeled in the likes of Digg and Trendspottr to its App Directory, and later added Instagram, SlideShare and a number of others services, before adding Reddit, StumbleUpon and more in October.
The App Directory launched late last year, featuring tools created by third-party developers to extend the main dashboard. With it, HootSuite allows developers to create new apps using the available toolkit, with the resulting apps integrated directly into HootSuite streams.
Here’s an overview of some of the key features with the lateste five new apps.
  • Vimeo joins YouTube as another video-hosting/streaming app on HootSuite. The Vimeo app lets users upload videos, search for and view videos, and share videos to their social networks.
  • The self-hosted WordPress.org blogging platform needs little introduction, and now you can monitor your self-hosted WordPress.org pages and posts, create and edit pages and posts, view, add and moderate comments, share your pages and posts to social networks in HootSuite.
  • Via.Me lets you share your stories in pictures, video, sound and text. The app for HootSuite allows you to upload media to your Via.Me account, stream your home feed, view account activity, follow fans who like and comment on your posts.
  • Reachli provides a suite of tools to help content creators and sellers post and measure their visual content on Pinterest. The Reachli app for HootSuite allows you to create campaigns when pinning to your Pinterest boards and view metrics for pins such as number of clicks, likes, repins and total reach.
  • Scripted is a scalable content creation solution for businesses looking to increase their inbound marketing metrics. The Scripted app for HootSuite allows you to stream all your social content jobs for distribution of personalized social media messaging to all your social networks.
600px scripted wordpress screenshot HootSuite bolsters its App Directory with Vimeo, WordPress.org and more

HootSuite’s App Directory has grown significantly in its first year, and the latest wave of apps were developed in respective order by Synaptive, Quinn Sakunaga, Invoke Media, Reachli, and Scripted.
Today represents the tenth wave of social apps added to the dashboard, and now means that the App Directory is home to 41 tools and applications.
Feature Image Credit – Thinkstock

Google+ by the numbers: 500m+ users, 235m of them active and 135m using the stream

Google+ by the numbers: 500m+ users, 235m of them active and 135m using the stream:  Google+ by the numbers: 500m+ users, 235m of them active and 135m using the stream
Google has just revealed a number of new Google+ stats on its blog, including that so far, more than 500 million people have upgraded (joined), 235 million are actively using Google+ features (+1′ing apps in Google Play, hanging out in Gmail, connecting with friends in Search), and 135 million are active in just the stream.
It’s important to note that while Google+ is far more than a social network, rather a social layer stretched atop Google, the number of users active in the stream, a mere 135 million, reflects the actual number of people using the service itself. As Google directly integrates Google+ across all of its services, its usage numbers are poised to grow across the board, but it’s still particularly interesting to see that 135 million, or just ~27% (135/500) of Google+ users are actually using the service proper.
Back at Google I/O in June, Google shared that Google+ had surpassed 250 million accounts, 150 million of which were active monthly. It’s likely that this previous 150 million stat reflects the usage of all Google+ features, and has grown to the 235 million number detailed above.
Today, Google also launched Google+ Communities, the service’s answer to Facebook Groups, which is aimed at helping you meet new people. The company also made good on its promise to continue development of Nik Software’s apps (after it acquired the company in September), today launching a new, free Android version of Snapseed, while making the existing iOS version completely free.

Bing continues its hypocritical ‘Scroogled’ campaign against Google Shopping with new hatchet-clip

Bing continues its hypocritical ‘Scroogled’ campaign against Google Shopping with new hatchet-clip: 2012 12 06 11h07 47 520x245 Bing continues its hypocritical Scroogled campaign against Google Shopping with new hatchet clip
Microsoft doesn’t want you using Google Shopping this holiday season, as in its view the product’s move to accepting paid listings has muddied its waters, making transparent search all but impossible.
To that end, the company has put forth a new campaign entitled ‘Scroogled’ to highlight how Google is being, it would seem, akin to the storied Ebeneezer Scrooge, taking more money than it should for its services. Today, Bing released a new video clip slapping Google for what it views as bad behavior.
The catch to all of this is that Bing isn’t exactly clean on the very same issue. For an in-depth look as to why Bing it being a bit hyperbolic, and unfair, Danny Sullivan at Search Engine Land has the full scoop. Two short excerpts  from his excellent piece, however, set the ground:
[Microsoft] also said that the most listings within Bing Shopping come from merchants who are already in the free listings program and through Bing’s crawling of the web. “We don’t get paid for the majority of products in there,” [it] explained.
All that was news to me. All that would be news to any consumer, because as I’ve covered, Bing doesn’t explain how Bing Shopping works to consumers. To merchants, the implication is that it’s pay-to-play.
And:
What about that claim to consumers that at Bing Shopping, “payment is not a factor used to rank results.” Clearly some merchants only get listed because they paid to be included in Shopping.com, which in turn got them listed in Bing. Payment isn’t the primary factor for ranking well, but it is a factor for these companies. If they didn’t pay, they wouldn’t have a chance to rank at all.
In Microsoft’s view, paid inclusion is quite different from pay-to-rank. Sure, but Microsoft is hitting Google for charging for access to its shopping product. Bing too generates revenues from merchants who participate in its shopping product.
There is a distinction to be made between the two companies approaches, and I’m not advocating that Google’s method is good or preferable, but for Bing to be causing this much ruckus over the issue feels more like propoganda than pro-consumer awareness building.
Here’s the new video:
Top Image Credit: Mike McCune