Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

ProPublica's Lois Beckett on how politicians are presenting themselves to different audiences and whether they have a responsibility to tell people about the personal information they collect about them on Facebook, Google and other social media

http://www.propublica.org/article/how-to-win-facebook-friends-and-influence-people
ProPublica

How to Win Facebook Friends and Influence People

by Lois Beckett, ProPublica,  
March 13, 2012, 1:31 p.m.

Instead of picketing outside company headquarters, an advocacy group is using Facebook ads to try to influence people whose profiles identify them as employees of Freddie Mac or JPMorgan Chase.

The anti-foreclosure ad campaign, which launches today, asks Freddie and Chase employees to talk to their CEOs about a veteran -- a former Marine -- who's facing eviction in California.

"This is not any sort of attack on the employees there," said Jim Pugh of Rebuild the Dream, which is running the ad campaign. "We're trying to let them know what's happening."

The ad that targets Freddie Mac employees features a small picture of CEO Charles Haldeman's face, and the message, "Freddie Mac did what???? Freddie Mac is evicting a former Marine who's been trying to pay his mortgage. Tell CEO Haldeman to work out a fair deal with him!" according to a copy of the ad provided by Pugh.

The JPMorgan Chase ad is similar, but with a Chase logo instead of an executive's face.  

We've contacted Freddie Mac and JP Morgan Chase spokespeople for comment, and also reached out to Freddie Mac and JPMorgan Chase employees on Facebook. If you've seen one of these ads, please let us know.

 Targeted online advertising is nothing new. (As anyone who has changed their Facebook status to "engaged" can tell you, a simple update can bring a deluge of new ads.) But political campaigns and advocacy groups are increasingly adopting the same microtargeting tactics that companies use.  

Rick Perry's campaign, for instance, targeted faith-focused ads to people in Iowa who listed themselves as Christians on Facebook, and ads featuring his wife to the state's female conservatives, Politico reported.  

According to FEC data, Endorse Liberty, a super PAC that supports Ron Paul, has led the way on Facebook expenditures, spending a total of $241,508 through January 2012.

And it's not just Facebook and Google where campaigns and activists are doing microtargeting. The music site Pandora announced last year that it would be selling political ad space targeted to the zip codes of particular listeners, the Wall Street Journal reported.

There's nothing inherently problematic about targeted ads. Campaigns have been using direct mail to target particular voters for decades. Digital targeting can be a cost-effective way of spending advertising dollars, especially for smaller groups, like Rebuild the Dream, which sees the ads as a great way to get more bang for their buck in terms of reaching their intended audience. (The group also launched a special donation drive specifically for the Facebook ad buy.) ProPublica even used Facebook ads to try to find sources for our 2009 series, When Caregivers Harm.

But as the ability to use data to reach particular people grows more sophisticated, targeting risks crossing privacy lines, as demonstrated by a recent New York Times article on how Target knew a teenage customer was pregnant before her father did.

What's clear is that if all this microtargeting translates into electoral gains, the scale and sophistication of these efforts will continue to grow, and the data science that gained traction in 2008 will become a regular part of campaigning. In the meantime, the Obama campaign's already substantial data team continues to hire statistical modeling analysts and analytics engineers.

The increasing ease and flexibility of online targeting also raises new questions about how politicians are presenting themselves to different audiences, how much campaigns need to tell their supporters about the personal information they collect -- and what will happen to the massive databases of voter information collected during the 2012 presidential campaign. Will they be sold? Passed on to other politicians?

Rebuild the Dream, which focuses on economic issues, was launched by MoveOn.org in 2011, but has been independent since January, Pugh said. The group's president is former Obama green jobs adviser Van Jones.

Pugh worked on the Obama campaign's digital analytics team in 2008 while also trying to finish a Ph.D. dissertation in robotics, and later did similar work for the Democratic National Committee. He said he was not sure what kind of reaction the ads would receive.

"I would imagine that people are fairly used to targeted ads at this point," he said. But while people who work in politics and advocacy may be used to receiving Facebook ads targeting specific causes, "It's hard to know in advance how unusual it will seem to the employees of Freddie Mac and JP Morgan Chase."
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Reader comments at: http://www.propublica.org/article/how-to-win-facebook-friends-and-influence-people/single#comments

Thursday, January 6, 2011

NYT's DealBook crew on the Facebook-Goldman Sachs deal, Facebook's $50 billion valuation, and what it may mean about social networking investments


New York Times DealBook's Andrew Ross Sorkin and Evelyn M. Rusli discuss Facebook's valuation after the social networking site raised $500 million from Goldman Sachs and DST Global, a Russian investor.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_P3g5QDWszM


The related article is at:

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/01/02/goldman-invests-in-facebook-at-50-billion-valuation/

Below, some background on Section 12(g) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, enacted by Congress in 1964, and its application (or non-application) in the current Facebook deal.

Video: Goldman-Facebook Deal Raises Debate on Investor Pool
http://bcove.me/2c4j7kl9

Related article at:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/01/05/the-500-investor-threshold-debated-for-its-47-year-history/

See also:

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/01/03/russians-large-stake-in-facebook-grows-larger/

http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/01/03/why-facebook-is-such-an-important-friend-for-goldman-sachs/


http://search.sec.gov/secgov/index.jsp#queryResultsTop


http://dealbook.nytimes.com/


http://www.sec.gov/index.htm


While the Miami Herald and the South Florida Sun-Sentinel snooze, with their busy and unimaginative websites, the New York Times is making big investments in improving content for their readers in their business coverage and making their financial stories must-read -and watch!




Beet.TV: The New York Times is Capturing the "Character-Driven Drama" of Wall Street with Dealbook Videos

Article at: http://www.beet.tv/2011/01/the-new-york-times-is-capturing-the-character-driven-drama-of-wall-street-with-dealbook-videos-.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+BeetTV+%28Beet.TV%29

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"Incredible Appetite for Financial Journalism" Will Drive Expansion of New York Times Dealbook in 2011

Article at: http://www.beet.tv/2010/12/incredible-appetite-for-financial-journalism-will-drive-expansion-of-new-york-times-dealbook-in-2011.html

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Sayfie Review Meetup for Broward County on Thursday July 15th in Fort Laudedale at Big City Tavern at 6 p.m.

http://www.meetup.com/Sayfie-Summer-Meetup/12138/

When: Thursday, July 15, 2010, 6:00 PM,


Where:, Big City Tavern, 609 East Las Olas Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale, FL,


Happy Hour until 7:00 p.m. We will have a section reserved for us.
Just ask for the Sayfie Review group.


SAYFIE  REVIEW LOGO


Dear David,

Last week, SayfieReview.com invited its readers to the Sayfie Summer Meetup on July 15th. Since the announcement, dozens of Sayfie Review readers and Florida politicos have signed up to attend get-togethers in 14 cities - from Niceville, Florida, to Nice, France!

The Sayfie Summer Meetup is a chance for Sayfie Review readers everywhere to gather and connect with each other. Check out our webpage where you can sign up to attend or organize a Meetup near you on July 15th.

We are also randomly giving away a brand new Apple iPad WiFi + 3G to one of the attendees at each of the two Meetups with the highest number of registered attendees on our Meetup page (as of 5 p.m. on July 14th).

I hope you will be able to join us and connect with other readers of the Sayfie Review on July 15th.

Click here to find or set up a Sayfie Summer Meetup near you!

All the best,
Justin

p.s. Use the hashtag #SayfieMeetup on Twitter.

phone: 954-523-2427
web: www.sayfiereview.com

Monday, October 19, 2009

Foursquare blows-off South Florida for Indy, Omaha & 13 other cities. They want you to beg for it, first!

Foursquare blows-off South Florida
for Indy, Omaha & 13 other American
cities.

Marketing types want you to beg for it
first, like you once begged for ESPN 2.

Sort of makes you think they should
get a placement deal with Bravo or
E! for one of their reality shows, eh?
Just not Miami Social.


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New York Observer
Foursquare Gets the Times Treatment
By Gilles Reagan
October 19, 2009

Foursquare, the location-based mobile application that the Observer has featured several times, has (finally!) earned a profile in the New York Times.

As co-creator Dennis Crowley told us in July, Foursquare's next step was to "aim past the nerds." Mr. Crowley and Naveen Selvadurai might get what they want with a Times article, which will reach a widespread, mainstream readership. But is that what its users want? According to Jenna Wortham's piece, "underground status is part of Foursquare's appeal, its fans say," she wrote. "It is not yet cluttered with celebrities, nosy mothers-in-law or annoying co-workers."

Read the rest of the story at:
http://www.observer.com/2009/media/foursquare-gets-times-treatment

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New York Times
Face-to-Face Socializing Starts With a Mobile Post

By Jenna Wortham

October 19, 2009

Twitter and Facebook ask users to answer the question: What are you doing right now?

But for many urbanites in their 20s and 30s, two other questions are just as important: Where are you, and can I come join you?

For them, a fast-growing social networking service called Foursquare is becoming the tool of choice. A combination of friend-finder, city guide and competitive bar game, Foursquare lets users “check in” with a cellphone at a bar, restaurant or art gallery. That alerts their friends to their current location so they can drop by and say hello.

Read the rest of the story at:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/19/technology/internet/19foursquare.html

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See http://foursquare.tumblr.com/post/213931642/foursquare-taking-north-america-by-storm for the list of cities that will have this available long before before
South Florida ever gets a sniff.