Media

Robin Good's insight:A free online course from YouTube to help any video publisher maximize the use of the tools and features available in the new YouTube One Page channel experience. The course starts on June 3rd.This is the course prog...
Robin Good's insight:A free online course from YouTube to help any video publisher maximize the use of the tools and features available in the new YouTube One Page channel experience. The course starts on June 3rd.This is the course program:Week 1Lesson 1: Step up Your GameLesson 2: What Makes a Channel TickLesson 3: Land Your BrandWeek 2Lesson 4: Rock Solid Building BlocksLesson 5: Rack and RollLesson 6: Bringing It All TogetherPost-course assessmentSign up for the course: http://creatoracademy.withgoogle.comThe forum of the course will open on May 29th and the course materials (links to lessons) will go live on June 3.Start prepping for the course now here:See what's in store for you in Week 1 - Watch the trailer.Take the pre-course SURVEY!Check out the Playbook! There are some great tools and resources to give you a head start.Find out more: https://creatoracademy.withgoogle.com/https://creatoracademy.withgoogle.com/previewFAQ: https://creatoracademy.withgoogle.com/faqCourse info: https://creatoracademy.withgoogle.com/courseSee it on Scoop.it, via Online Video Publishing
39 minutes ago
iframe.twitter-tweet { margin: 40px auto !important; } Have you ever tried tweeting at a major news organization? How often have they responded or retweeted? Probably not often — and that corresponds to the findings offered by a GW/Pew s...
iframe.twitter-tweet { margin: 40px auto !important; } Have you ever tried tweeting at a major news organization? How often have they responded or retweeted? Probably not often — and that corresponds to the findings offered by a GW/Pew study of 13 major news organizations which found “limited use of the institution’s public Twitter identity, one that generally takes less advantage of the interactive and reportorial nature of the Twitter.” So when I went to The Miami Herald as part of a much larger project looking at newsrooms and news buildings, I was pleasantly surprised to find it, like some other newspapers, has actual people manning Twitter — breaking news “by hand,” interacting with readers, and having a genuine public conversation over the main @miamiherald Twitter account, with its 98,000 followers. (Aside from Twitter, The Miami Herald is making ample use of its Facebook account, posting new stories once an hour and relying on feedback from the 46,000-plus audience for stories and tips — and as an extension of the Public Insight Network pioneered by American Public Radio.) In Miami, Twitter takes on two distinct modes during the day — in the morning as headline service and in the afternoon as conversation. “In the morning, we try to get the audience between 6 and 8 a.m. on Twitter and on the website,” says continuous news editor/day editor Jeff Kleinman, who says he wakes up at 4:30 to begin monitoring the news. Kleinman uses Twitter to break news — whether or not it’s on the paper’s website. “We want to be first,” he noted, as he quickly dashed off a tweet about a boat fire in front of me. More often then not, though, there will be a link to a short two-paragraph story begun on the website. But not always. Miami still remains a vibrant and competitive news marketplace with three local TV stations chasing breaking news, the Sun Sentinel, and even blogs getting in on niche action. So in the breaking-news morning environment, “If something happens, I’ll put it up on Twitter, I’ll write or have the reporter write two quick grafs on the homepage with italics that say ‘More to come,’” he said. “We’re constantly updating over Twitter and on the website as news comes in.” There’s less time for conversation, but Kleinman is especially careful to do one thing: retweet what his reporters are offering from the field to the wider audience. “We’re not there, but they are, and Twitter is often the fastest way to say what’s going on,” he noted. So while the reporters have their own followings, their work gets amplified to a larger audience. Take this example of breaking news: BREAKING: RT @waltermichot: Neighbors gather at scene of one shot and transported 5644 NW 4th Ave. twitter.com/WalterMichot/s… — The Miami Herald (@MiamiHerald) May 2, 2013 Walter Michot, a former photographer who prowls the city with an iPhone (another story), has frequently broken news on his Twitter account, which has then been retweeted by @miamiherald. The mantra in the newsroom is to tweet, write, tweet, write, perhaps blog, and then write a takeout for the web and perhaps the paper. Later on in the afternoon, Twitter and Facebook take on a more conversational tone. Luisa Yanez runs the @miamiherald account then. She focuses on three key things: curating incoming reporters’ work and retweeting it — adding additional substance if necessary; offering updates from the website; and responding to readers. The Miami Herald also offers updates about traffic and weather “as a public service and because people want to know,” Kleinman said, so followers might see something like this. #Weather alert: Severe thunderstorm warning issued for the #Keys until 1:30 p.m. — The Miami Herald (@MiamiHerald) May 2, 2013 And then Yanez will retweet a reader who happens to chime in with a photo, in th
about 2 hours ago
The Daily Mail carries a front page picture today of Boris Johnson, London's mayor, with a caption-headline saying: "Boris and the lovechild he now can't keep secret."Inside is a full-page article explaining why the judges agreed that th...
The Daily Mail carries a front page picture today of Boris Johnson, London's mayor, with a caption-headline saying: "Boris and the lovechild he now can't keep secret."Inside is a full-page article explaining why the judges agreed that the secret should be revealed. Here's the intro:"The public does have a right to know about Boris Johnson's philandering past, the appeal court confirmed.That succinct sentence is a true reflection of the judgment, which supported the original ruling by a high court judge, Mrs Justice Nicola Davies, that the Mail was justified in publishing stories about Johnson's illegitimate child because his extramarital affairs called into question his fitness for public office.Indeed, the Master of the Rolls, Lord Justice Dyson, was so convinced by this argument that he repeated it in the concluding paragraph of his judgment. He said: "It is not in dispute that the legitimate public interest in the father's character is an important factor to be weighed in the balance against the claimant's expectation of privacy. The core information in this story, namely that the father had an adulterous affair with the mother, deceiving both his wife and the mother's partner and that the claimant, born about nine months later, was likely to be the father's child, was a public interest matter which the electorate was entitled to know when considering his fitness for high public office."The two judges sitting with him agreed. So we now know that Johnson's affair with an art consultant, Helen Macintyre, resulted in the birth of a girl named Stephanie in November 2009. (Well, we knew it long ago, but this judgment confirms that the paper is legally ok to publish the fact).At the original trial, the Mail's publishers, Associated Newspapers, were ordered to pay £15,000 for publishing photographs of Stephanie, thereby breaching her privacy.But the child's legal backers were required to pay 80% of the Mail's legal costs, which were estimated at £200,000.Macintyre appealed against the decision not to award her damages because the Mail published details of her affair with Johnson and about the birth of their child. It is that appeal the court rejected.Given the fact that four experienced judges have unequivocally supported the paper's public interest justification for running its story, it would be odd for any journalist to question the merits of their argument. I certainly don't intend to do so. What strikes me about the case is that it tends to prove that politicians of a certain stripe and character can rise above the embarrassment, as did two past Tory philanders, Alan Clark and Steven Norris. So it probably won't matter at all to Johnson's future electoral chances - whenever and wherever he stands - because his philandering appears not to bother people over much. The Mail may well feel that it should have an impact on voters' decision-making and, doubtless, should the Tories dare to elect Johnson as party leader (and potential prime minister) the paper would warn their readers to beware of Boris.That scenario is so full of journalistically sexy possibilities, one can hardly wait.Daily MailBoris JohnsonPrivacy & the mediaPrivacyMedia lawPress freedomAssociated NewspapersLondonMayoral electionsConservativesRoy Greensladeguardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
about 3 hours ago
[photo by OZinOH] I wanted to share a list of cool, free multimedia tools from a talk I presented last night at Florida International University during a meeting of the fledgling Hacks/Hackers chapter in Miami. I also got to help with so...
[photo by OZinOH] I wanted to share a list of cool, free multimedia tools from a talk I presented last night at Florida International University during a meeting of the fledgling Hacks/Hackers chapter in Miami. I also got to help with some “TOOL tools,” as local journohacker and Hacks/Hackers co-organizer Rebekah Monson put it, during an impromptu tire change in a rainstorm. So without further ado, here’s a PDF of the handout, as well as a list below. It’s not an exhaustive list but just a sampling of my favorites: CHARTS/DATA VISUALIZATION Datawrapper– datawrapper.de Embeddable, easy to make charts (line, pie, etc.) that are also downloadable for print. (NOTE: Non-modern browsers display a static image version of the chart) Infogr.am – infogr.am Gorgeous data charts with a cool layout tool to add photos, text, multiple charts and more. Pro account lets you download files. Tableizer – tableizer.journalistopia.com Quickly turns spreadsheets into HTML tables you can put online. Built by yours truly! Google MyMaps – maps.google.com (Click “My Places>Create Map”) Google has beefed up its map creation tool with shapes, custom points and more. Google Fusion Tables – drive.google.com (Go to Create>Connect More Apps) Create interactive maps using shapefiles and robust data sets. Google Forms – drive.google.com (Go to Create>Form) Create forms to get from users and collect it in an organized spreadsheet. PHOTO & VIDEO Zeega – zeega.com Animated GIFs meet funky photo galleries. Includes audio, video and text editing. Pixlr – pixlr.com Excellent in-browser photo editor, perfect for wide newsroom use. Has advanced and easy modes, layers and more. GIMP – gimp.org The leading free, open-source photo editing tool similar to Photoshop. TubeChop – tubechop.com Point readers to a specific chunk of a YouTube video. ThingLink – thinglink.com Post photos with tags containg text, other photos, videos, music and more. PhotoPeach – photopeach.com A quick and free way to make photo slideshows to music. $3/month lets you upload audio. ClipConverter or Easy YouTube Downloader – clipconverter.cc, http://is.gd/xK5MDs Used to grab YouTube video source files. Useful for transmitting video from the field via YouTube. ClipConverter can also be used as a general purpose file conversion tool. Live streaming: UStream.TV, Livestream.com, YouTube.com Excellent live streaming services that have embeddable players. Each have different revenue models and setups.  Qik – qik.com A service that allows you to easily stream live video from many mobile devices. TIMELINES TimelineJS – timeline.verite.co An embeddable timeline app with a slideshow-like presentation. VuVox – vuvox.com The collage tool creates stunning multimedia timelines that let you embed slideshows, video and more. Dipity – dipity.com An embeddable timeline app great for lots of detailed data points. OTHER TOOLS RebelMouse – rebelmouse.com Display a variety of live social feeds in an attractive layout. Great for breaking news. Storify – storify.com Embed all sorts of content: social posts, photos, videos and much more in a vertical timeline. Great for breaking news or topical coverage. AutoHotKey – autohotkey.com End dumb, repetitive typing by creating macros that will run in any program. I have a tutorial posted here on how to use this in a newsroom. Audacity – audacity.sourceforge.net A powerful, free audio-editing suite used by many multimedia producers. Spotify Embeds – developer.spotify.com/technologies/spotify-play-button/ Embed commercial songs and playlists. Use the smaller iframe for a compact display. EasyPolls & MicroPoll– easypolls.net, micropoll.com Create embeddable polls for your site with no hassle. Inkscape – inkscape.org A nice, open-source vector editing tool similar to Adobe Illustrator. FireShot - addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/5648 Lets you easily create, edit and add notes to scre
about 5 hours ago
When BitTorrent Inc. announced its plan to make uTorrent ad-supported there was a small user revolt. The people complaining were mostly annoyed that there would be no option to disable the ads. Luckily, BitTorrent listened to the feedba...
When BitTorrent Inc. announced its plan to make uTorrent ad-supported there was a small user revolt. The people complaining were mostly annoyed that there would be no option to disable the ads. Luckily, BitTorrent listened to the feedback and quickly decided that users would indeed get a chance to opt-out. However, new stats revealed by the San Francisco company show that there are plenty of users who do not disable the ads displayed in the top bar. In fact, billions of ad impressions have been served since the change was introduced late last year. According to BitTorrent Inc. the uTorrent and BitTorrent mainline clients are currently good for six billion ad displays a month. Most of these come from uTorrent, which has by far the largest user base of the two. uTorrent Ad Based on the stats reported by BitTorrent, the uTorrent client serves more than five billion ads every month. This is quite an impressive figure and more than most smaller advertising companies serve on their entire network. A quick inspection of the type of ads run on the network reveals that poker software and PC performance ‘enhancing’ apps are the most advertised products. This may of course differ based on the country people download from. Some of the advertised products are downloaded by thousands of people a day. A product called “SpeedUpMyComputer” has more than 45,000 seeders and hundreds of active downloaders at the time of writing. Thus far we haven’t been able to spot any ads for premium brands, or plugs for entertainment industry companies. This might be the next challenge for BitTorrent, because there’s certainly an audience to cater to. As we reported earlier not all ads are allowed on the network. For example, BitTorrent does not accept ads for torrent-friendly VPN providers as these are considered to be “high risk” for some reason. All in all, it is safe to assume that the ads are providing a healthy new revenue stream for the company. Over the past years the bulk of the revenue came from toolbar installs but with the current numbers the ads have the potential to add a few million to that each year. TorrentFreak asked BitTorrent to comment on the dazzling numbers and the company’s outlook for the future, but we received no response. Source: uTorrent Serves Over 5 Billion Ads Per Month
about 5 hours ago
Data revolution has started in India: Vodafone India has reported a total data revenues of Rs 3,175 billion for the financial year ending March 31, 2013 (FY13), registering a 19.9% growth from Rs 2,640 billion data revenues in FY12. The ...
Data revolution has started in India: Vodafone India has reported a total data revenues of Rs 3,175 billion for the financial year ending March 31, 2013 (FY13), registering a 19.9% growth from Rs 2,640 billion data revenues in FY12. The numbers: - 37.3 million total data customers, up 12.7% from 33.1 million customers last quarter. - 3.3 million 3G customers, up 0.8 million from 2.5 million 3G customers last quarter. - 34 million 2G customers, up 3.4 million from 30.6 million 2G customers last quarter. - Data now contributes to 7% of the company’s total service revenues in FY13. - Vodafone India claims to have covered 18% of the data population as of March 2013. Vodafone defines data users as subscribers who have consumed greater than zero KB data on its GPRS or 3G networks. Data & Messaging revenues: For the quarter ending March 31, 2012, Vodafone saw a total data revenue of £107 million (around Rs 898.5 crore), up 13.8% from £94 million (Rs 788.4 crore) in the previous quarter and up 21.6% from from £88 million (Rs 737.6 crore) in the same quarter last year. The company however mentions a 29% growth in data revenues at constant exchange rates in its earnings presentation. Vodafone India’s Messaging revenues was £41 million (Rs 343.89 crore) for the quarter, flat sequentially from £41 million (Rs 343.89 crore) in the previous quarter but down 19.6% from £51 million (Rs 428.2 crore) in the same quarter last year. For the year FY13, the messaging revenues were £156 million (Rs 1309.9 crore), down 24.6% from £207 million (Rs 1738.2 crore) in FY12. Data Browsing Revenues vs VAS Revenues Interestingly, Vodafone India has also provided a split between data browsing revenues and other data revenues. The company has reported data browsing revenues of Rs 19.98 billion for FY13, up 50.5% from Rs 13.28 billion in FY12, while other data revenues (which we assume is VAS revenues) is around Rs 11.77 billion for FY13, down 10.8% from 13.19 billion in FY12. Financials Vodafone India’s voice revenues were £848 million (Rs 7,120 crore) for the quarter, up 8% from £785 million (Rs 6,633.4 crore) in the previous quarter and a minor 0.7% growth from £842 million (Rs 7,070.3 crore) in Q4-FY12. For the year FY13, the voice revenues were £3.21 billion (Rs 26,907 crore), a 1.23% dip from £3.25 billion (Rs 27,283.5 crore) revenues in FY12. The Fixed line revenue saw a 50% increase to £6 million (Rs 50.38 crore), up from £4 million (Rs 33.53 crore) in the previous quarter but same as £6 million (Rs 50.38 crore) in Q4-FY12 while the other service revenues declined by 27.36% to £146 million (Rs 1223.8 crore) from £201 million (Rs 1685.9 crore) in the previous quarter but increased by 33.94% from £109 million (Rs 915.3 crore) in Q4-FY12. Operational Highlights -  Vodafone India has 152.4 million subscribers for the quarter ending March 31, 2013, up from 147.4 million subscribers in January 1, 2013. The active subscriber base is over 95% of its total subscriber base. - Vodafone India claims to have the highest rural base among all other telcos with a rural subscriber base of 82.2 million as of Q4 2013. - It also claims to have the largest postpaid base of 8.6 million subscribers as of Q4 2013. - ARPU: Vodafone India’s (blended) ARPU (Average revenue per user) increased quarter on quarter (QoQ) to Rs 194 from Rs 182 in the previous quarter. - ARPM: The Average revenue per minute for Vodafone India stood at 0.44 paisa for Q4-FY13. - PostPaid ARPU vs Prepaid ARPU: Postpaid ARPU declined to Rs 684 QoQ, from Rs 703 in Q3-FY13. Prepaid ARPU increased to Rs 164 QoQ from Rs 153 in Q3-FY13. - Total Sites: Vodafone has a total 115,000 network sites in India. - Net Additions: Net Additions stood at 4.88 million subscribers for the quarter. The average customer growth slowed in Q4, as the subscriber verification regulations continued to impact gross additions, although Vodafone noted that the customer acquisition costs has remained low. - Prepaid
about 5 hours ago
Twitter positions itself as an accompaniment to watching TV. There's a term for it - double-screening. You're watching one. The other's on your knee.Double-screening works best with TV that requires low engagement. Eurovision, X Factor, ...
Twitter positions itself as an accompaniment to watching TV. There's a term for it - double-screening. You're watching one. The other's on your knee.Double-screening works best with TV that requires low engagement. Eurovision, X Factor, a football match between two teams you don't support. Somebody in advertising told me that they can track the amount of conversational "noise" on programmes of that kind. It continues all the way through.On the other hand programmes that require high levels of engagement, such as Homeland, are preceded and followed by lots of Twitter traffic. While the programme's on people are too busy watching. Makes sense.I wish somebody would come up with a name for the shows of enthusiasm that Twitter increasingly tempts people into. I'm getting the feeling that people's desire to be seen to enthuse about some new things, particularly in music, is greater than the actual enthusiasm they feel.Media can't hype people any longer but they're quite at liberty to hype themselves.
about 5 hours ago
Newspapers that generally support the Tory party have never been wildly enthusiastic about David Cameron. Now, on the evidence of today's leading articles and commentaries, they appear wholly hostile.The Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph ca...
Newspapers that generally support the Tory party have never been wildly enthusiastic about David Cameron. Now, on the evidence of today's leading articles and commentaries, they appear wholly hostile.The Daily Mail and Daily Telegraph carry extremely critical editorials, as does The Sun. And the Daily Express weighs in with a short rebuff. The Times, more measured as always, advises the prime minister to show greater leadership.To make matters worse for Cameron, there is yet more favourable press publicity for Ukip, the upstart party now apparently attracting support from disaffected Tories.I was amused by the Mail's reference to "press baron Lord Beaverbrook" in the intro of its leading article.It recalls one of his regular opening questions in his phone calls to his editors: "Who's in charge of the clattering train?"But, naturally enough, it fails to mention that Beaverbrook was the owner of the rival Express. No matter. The quote is certainly relevant to an editorial that amounts to a full-frontal attack on Cameron.The Mail: Cameron is guilty of 'sublime incompetence' Accusing him of "sublime incompetence" for turning "his pledge of an EU referendum, which ought to have been an electoral asset, into a fiasco," the Mail continues:"His gay marriage legislation, for which there is no public clamour whatever, has been an embarrassment. And now one of his inner circle is said to have dismissed party activists as 'mad, swivel-eyed loons'.Yesterday saw an extraordinary milestone in Tory history, when Ukip – the party Mr Cameron called 'fruitcakes and loonies', and which is now lagging only two points behind him in the polls – took out a full-page advertisement in the Daily Telegraph, house journal of the Conservative party.The irony is that, while written in saloon-bar language normally disdained by the Telegraph, every word was bang on target."Though it concedes that Nigel Farage's jibes were "a trifle unfair" it agrees with "the main thrust" of his attack, about Cameron's circle looking down on the party's natural supporters.Then it pointedly questions whether Cameron has any political convictions, contrasting that with the passionate views of "grassroots Tories" (which is a euphemism for the Mail's passionate views). They are "curbing mass immigration, standing up against the EU, reforming the NHS, cutting red tape, recognising marriage in the tax system or protecting children from internet porn." Worse, says the Mail, is that on the few matters that appear important to Cameron – such as gay marriage, wind farms and overseas aid – "he is utterly at odds with traditional Tories."And so "he is driving them into the arms of an engaging, pint-guzzling eccentric [Farage] whose natural place is on the Tory back benches."The Telegraph: Cameron's fight drove Tories to UkipThe Telegraph also suggests that Cameron is responsible for "the latest poll putting Ukip just two percentage points behind the Tories."Noting that "the campaign for gay marriage… prompted an ugly battle with the party's grassroots", the paper argues:"The subsequent revolt of the back benches has amplified rather than dampened the image of Tory traditionalism… while the insensitive way in which the prime minister tried to confront his party's social conservatives fuelled that impression that he is part of a privileged clique that looks upon ordinary members as 'swivel-eyed loons.'"According to the Telegraph, the fight that he picked (over gay marriage) "did not strengthen his leadership: it has fractured the British right, driving many Tories into Ukip's arms."After a reference to last week's rebellion by 116 Tory MPs over the EU referendum it says the current situation is "alarmingly reminiscent of the mid-1990s, when John Major struggled to hold his party together" over Europe:"The result then was that the government failed to win credit for its handling of the economy and was instead judged by the voters on its chaotic internal politics. Likewise, today's Conservat
about 7 hours ago
about 7 hours ago
Changes at the top at eBay India: Latif Nathani will join the company as its Managing Director, taking over responsibilities from Muralikrishnan B, who will leave the company by the end of the quarter, looking at entrepreneurial opportun...
Changes at the top at eBay India: Latif Nathani will join the company as its Managing Director, taking over responsibilities from Muralikrishnan B, who will leave the company by the end of the quarter, looking at entrepreneurial opportunities. Nathani, according to his LinkedIn profile, has been a product strategy consultant as the CEO of a firm called Mr LMN, and based in the San Francisco. In the past, he has worked with Microsoft (until July 2010) and Symantec. The fact that eBay might be looking for a new country manager for India was reported by TechCircle last month, and the company had declined to comment then. A statement from eBay India points towards the company looking at things from a mobile first perspective, pointing towards Nathani’s experience in mobile and in India. Muralikrishnan B had been made Country Manager in May 2011, after his predecessor Ambareesh Murty left the company. He had joined EBay India in 2005 as Director- Category and Product Management and has worked with VSNL, Sify and Asian Paints. The statement from eBay India points towards Murali exploring entrepreneurial opportunities outside of eBay, and it remains to be seen whether he follows Murty in starting up. Murty’s venture, Pepperfry, is among the few ecommerce companies to raise money in the current market situation, wherein most ecommerce ventures are struggling to stay afloat, and many are shutting down. Do read:Ambareesh Murty: You Don’t Need Much Money To Build A Good Ecommerce Biz In India. The statement from eBay India: LEADERSHIP CHANGES AT EBAY Dear Members Today we announced a transition in Leadership at eBay India. eBay India (www.ebay.in), India’s leading eCommerce Marketplace, today announced a transition in leadership. Mr. Latif Nathani, a senior executive with deep experience in the technology space in both India and the US will join eBay India as Managing Director. Mr. Nathani is taking over from Mr. Muralikrishnan B, who will be transitioning his responsibilities by the end of the quarter and then will be exploring entrepreneurial opportunities outside of eBay. Mr. Nathani has 22 years of experience including a 15 year career at Microsoft and Symantec and most recently served as CEO of product strategy consulting firm. He has extensive expertise in building and leading high performance global business, engineering and marketing teams. He also led a consumer incubator for Microsoft India (including equity investments in mobile payments), headed Global Product Marketing for Symantec’s Norton business and was cofounder of eMemories.com Mr. Nathani said, “I am excited about leading the thriving eBay India business, a market leader in India, that has helped thousands of entrepreneurs make a livelihood as well as provide vast selection and great deals to millions of consumers. The marketplaces business model fascinates me and I look forward to steering the talented India team to even greater heights.” eBay Senior Vice President and Managing Director APAC Mr. Jay Lee said, “India will be a mobile first market with the vast majority of Indian consumers having their first online transaction on a smartphone or tablet. Mr. Nathani’s deep experience in mobile, combined with his solid professional track record in India and the US make him an ideal candidate to lead eBay’s Indian business through the exciting changes ahead.” “I also want to thank Mr. Muralikrishnan for driving our efforts in strengthening eBay’s position in an increasingly competitive market over the past two years.” Mr. Muralikrishan said, “It has been my proud privilege to lead the India team and business through two of the most exciting years the industry has seen. We have set new benchmarks improving the customer experience along with building a stronger brand and reputation among government, industry, entrepreneurs and consumers. Regards Team eBay
about 8 hours ago