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There’s no room at the digital inn for more mobile messaging apps, but that’s not stopping them crowding in. Hike, an Indian mobile messaging app that’s only been around six months but has amassed more than five million...
There’s no room at the digital inn for more mobile messaging apps, but that’s not stopping them crowding in. Hike, an Indian mobile messaging app that’s only been around six months but has amassed more than five million registered users in that time, is doubling down on its home market while expanding its accessibility further afield too. Version 2.2 of the hike app adds support for four new languages — Spanish, French, Russian, and Portuguese — building out the previously supported two: English and German. The company said it plans to aggressively expand its language support each month as it chases after scale. And, evidently, as it chases competitors such as Japan’s Line which is also expanding into global markets such as Europe and LatAm. “We’re targeting those languages which we’ve seen the most demand for,” says the company. “With these languages, and English and German already supported, we’ll be supporting approximately more than 85% of the world’s mobile population. In addition to this, we’ll also be adding support for four new languages every month.” Interestingly, hike does not yet support any Indian languages owing to the linguistic landscape being so diverse, with more than 15 major languages spoken across the region. It does plan to start tackling this though, with Hindu suport likely coming next to cover off a significant chunk of the population. It also intends to build native Indian language support and keyboards for all major languages into its app so it doesn’t have to depend on the OS/device (OS fragmentation is another big issue in the region). “We’ll probably be launching Hindi support next (which’d cover a significant portion of the Indian population), as well as some other top languages. You can expect much deeper local language support in the coming months,” it says. As well as extending its global reach by bolstering language support, the new version of the hike app adds a feature hike is hoping will give it serious uplift in its home market. Offline messages is an SMS conversation tech the company told TechCrunch about back in May. The feature allows users in India to keep in touch, regardless of whether the person they are sending a message to has 3G data enabled or not because messages are converted to SMS for delivery if there’s no viable data connection. Other new features in v2.2 of hike’s app include, somewhat inevitably, sticker packs — showing how hike is following in the footsteps of messaging competitors such as Line and Viber by sharpening its entertainment credentials. As Line has, hike has launched its own brand characters in sticker form, along with various other types of sharable imagery such as “expressions, rage faces, and some localised stickers targeted specifically at the Indian market”. Click to view slideshow. “It’s been around 15 hours since we launched, and we’re seeing the usage of stickers increase every hour. We’ll easily hit more than one million stickers shared on Day 1,” it says. “We expect it to grow significantly, both organically and through some innovative marketing efforts that we’ve lined up to take them mass market in India.” For now hike’s stickers are free but it intends to launch paid packs to monetise the feature in future — as Line has successfully been doing. “We do expect stickers to become a significant revenue stream going forward,” it says, but adds that its focus is not yet on revenue. For the moment, hike’s focus is on building out features to help it grow, since occupying such a competitive space as messaging absolutely necessities maintaining momentum — or the risk is to fall by the wayside as rivals streak ahead. Other new features introduced in v2.2 of hike include a mode called Last Seen, which allows users to share wi
20 minutes ago
Intercom, a startup promising to help online businesses to communicate with their customers in a more personalized way, has raised a $6 million Series A. I wrote about the company last month, when Facebook’s Paul Adams joined Inter...
Intercom, a startup promising to help online businesses to communicate with their customers in a more personalized way, has raised a $6 million Series A. I wrote about the company last month, when Facebook’s Paul Adams joined Intercom as its new head of product design. At the time, Adams told me that Intercom’s work matches his own belief that businesses’ interactions with customers have to become more personal and relationship-based. CEO Eoghan McCabe offered a similar vision this week. “Loyalty is magic,” he argued, recalling that the the personal service he received at a friend’s chain of coffee shops meant that he’d walk past competing shops and invite friends to this one. “It became kind of clear to me that on the web, you don’t really have those relationships,” he said, aside from “a few little outliers like Zappos who have invested heavily in great service.” In order to enable those kinds of relationships, McCabe said Intercom has a a couple of key features. For one thing, he said that businesses usually have to “stitch together” products to to run an online help desk, email marketing, customer relationship management, and marketing automation. That’s a flawed approach, because they’re all trying to accomplish the same broad goal — “to provide simple, human service.” So Intercom brings all of that functionality together in one place. Plus, McCabe said that by adding just a few lines of JavaScript to their site, businesses get a natural way to interact with their customers, not just by sending them marketing emails (which often come in at inconvenient times and are ignored), but also at the moment of greatest relevance, “when they’re inside your product.” That all sounds appealing, but are businesses really going to become more personal and less spammy just because they have better tools? “The thing is, no business inherently wants to be spammy,” McCabe said. “It’s shit for business. Even assholes know it’s a dumb thing to do.” The problem, he said, is that there’s “so much friction in the process that you can’t afford to be very targeted and personal.” Eliminate that friction and businesses can do a better job at this stuff. That’s also why McCabe said most of the new funding will go towards improving the product, while also hiring more people to expand Intercom’s own service team. The Series A comes from The Social+Capital Partnership, the firm founded by former Facebook vice president Chamath Palihapitiya, with participation from Freestyle Capital and David Sacks, founder and CEO of Yammer. Intercom previously raised $1 million from Twitter co-founder Biz Stone, 500 Startups, and others.
26 minutes ago
July 9-10, 2013 San Francisco, CA Tickets On Sale Now SocialRadar has raised $12.75 million to, well, build out your social radar. Its application combines location-based mobile technology and social media information to make you aware ...
July 9-10, 2013 San Francisco, CA Tickets On Sale Now SocialRadar has raised $12.75 million to, well, build out your social radar. Its application combines location-based mobile technology and social media information to make you aware of the people and connections around you. It seems a lot like Highlight, which generated a lot of fanfare at the SXSW conference in 2012 but hasn’t made much noise since. SocialRadar is still in the development phase and is working with iPhone, Android, and Google Glass to “change the way people connect.” Founder and CEO Michael Chasen said that there are 1.1 billion smartphones and 2.8 billion online social profiles. SocialRadar’s “singular vision” is to make use of this information through GPS, allowing you to walk into a room and immediately have access to a relationship map. Serendipity is so old-fashioned, don’t you think? Chasen was the cofounder and former CEO of ed-tech behemoth Blackboard. He spent 15 years there and took the company public in 2004, and then sold it to Providence Equity Partners in 2011 for $1.7 billion. This latest project is taking on the social-local-mobile space, although it seems a bit late to the game. I don’t know anyone who still uses Highlight (and I have pretty tech savvy friends.) It is awkward to go up to someone and say “hey, this app said we should be friends” and networking is generally done through warm introductions. Furthermore, if I am at walking into a party or bar, chances are I am familiar with my friends who are there and don’t need my phone to remind me. My own skepticism aside, the DC-based company managed to pull in a hefty Series A round of funding from DC-heavy hitters. New Enterprise Associates bed this round, along with Grotech Ventures, and Swan and Legend Ventures, Big name angels also participated, including Path cofounder Dave Morin, AOL cofounder Steve Case, Ted Leonsis, partner at General Catalyst Kevin Colleran and others. Not too much information about SocialRadar yet, and this significant support leads me to believe it is much more than Highlight, the next generation. Photo Credit: SocialRadar Filed under: Deals, Entrepreneur, Mobile, Social .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat { width:278px; margin:0px 0px 10px 20px; padding:10px; float:right; border:1px solid #e4e4e4; font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif; color:#000; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat .logo-date-wrap { width:100%; display:block; float:left; margin-bottom:8px; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat img { float:left; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat .date-location { float:right; font-size:12px; line-height:14px; text-align:center; padding-left:7px; padding-top:5px; padding-bottom:3px; border-left:1px solid #e6e6e6; color:#585a5b; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat .cta { display:block; clear:both; width:100%; border-radius:5px; border:1px solid #1864b1; color:#fff; text-shadow: 0px -1px 0px rgba(0,0,0,0.3); text-align:center; text-decoration:none; font-weight:600; font-size:18px; line-height:17px; padding:4px 0px 6px 0px; background: #1f80e4; background: -moz-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%, #1862ae 100%); background: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, color-stop(0%,#1f80e4), color-stop(100%,#1862ae)); background: -webkit-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); background: -o-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); background: -ms-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); background: linear-gradient(to bottom,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient( startColorstr='#1f80e4', endColorstr='#1862ae',GradientType=0 ); }
27 minutes ago
Pindrop Security specializes in finding and stopping phone fraudsters who prey on call centers and banks. Now, with an $11 million round of funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, the startup hopes to expand its efforts around the globe. Wha...
Pindrop Security specializes in finding and stopping phone fraudsters who prey on call centers and banks. Now, with an $11 million round of funding led by Andreessen Horowitz, the startup hopes to expand its efforts around the globe. What Pindrop does is actually interesting. It uses a technique called Acoustic Fingerprinting to identify fraudsters, their locations, and their devices, then adds that data to a huge store of records. This database, called CallDNA, helps to sort the legitimate from the malicious callers. The company says it can pinpoint 80 percent of would-be attackers on their first call. About a year ago, Pindrop closed a tiny $1 million round from Andreesen and a school of others, including New World Ventures, Sigma Partners, and Googler turned angel investor Kevin Donahue. Today’s funding, which saw participation from Citi Ventures, Redpoint, Felicis Ventures, will help Pindrop hire more engineers, ops team members, sales folks, and marketing professionals, expanding its customer base in the U.S., Europe, and Canada. “Enterprises, and particularly financial institutions, are facing increasing volumes of attacks from sophisticated social engineering operations,” said Pindrop co-founder and CEO Vijay Balasubramaniyan in a statement on the news. “Pindrop’s solutions are the first tool for financial institutions and enterprises to detect and stop these attacks accurately and consistently on the first call. This investment will allow us to meet the tremendous market demand we’re experiencing.” Founded in 2010, Pindrop Security is based in Atlanta, Georgia. Image credit: stephenliveshere/Flickr Filed under: Deals, Security
27 minutes ago
July 9-10, 2013 San Francisco, CA Tickets On Sale Now Intercom, a software startup that promises to simplify customer relationship management, has just announced a healthy first round of funding. The $6 million infusion was led by the ...
July 9-10, 2013 San Francisco, CA Tickets On Sale Now Intercom, a software startup that promises to simplify customer relationship management, has just announced a healthy first round of funding. The $6 million infusion was led by the Social+Capital Partnership with participation from previous investor Freestyle Capital and David Sacks, founder and CEO of Yammer. Intercom’s software helps sales and marketing folks handle tasks like newsletter distribution, lifecycle marketing, customer support, and new customer development. As a rep said in an email to VentureBeat, the company feels that “web businesses have the potential to recreate the old pub experience where businesses know every customer by name, their interests, and what makes them happiest in order to better serve them.” Think Cheers, but everybody knows your name because you live in a well-organized database containing all kinds of personal details about your life and purchasing habits. “For too many companies, the process of reaching out to a customer looks like this: Pull up the helpdesk to view submitted tickets, check user backgrounds on separate CRM software, and use the email marketing program to send all users with a similar issue the same generic email, even though the email automation software sent those people a completely mistargeted email the day before,” said Intercom CEO Eoghan McCabe in a statement on the funding news. “It’s incredibly hard to provide great customer service when you have to use four disconnected tools. Companies end up spamming these customers, because they don’t have the power to target and personalize.” The $6 million Series A follows a 2012 seed round of $1.75 million from from Freestyle, 500 Startups, and various and assorted angel investors. Image credit: Shutterstock Filed under: Deals .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat { width:278px; margin:0px 0px 10px 20px; padding:10px; float:right; border:1px solid #e4e4e4; font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif; color:#000; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat .logo-date-wrap { width:100%; display:block; float:left; margin-bottom:8px; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat img { float:left; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat .date-location { float:right; font-size:12px; line-height:14px; text-align:center; padding-left:7px; padding-top:5px; padding-bottom:3px; border-left:1px solid #e6e6e6; color:#585a5b; } .boilerplate-before .event-boilerplate-mobilebeat .cta { display:block; clear:both; width:100%; border-radius:5px; border:1px solid #1864b1; color:#fff; text-shadow: 0px -1px 0px rgba(0,0,0,0.3); text-align:center; text-decoration:none; font-weight:600; font-size:18px; line-height:17px; padding:4px 0px 6px 0px; background: #1f80e4; background: -moz-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%, #1862ae 100%); background: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, color-stop(0%,#1f80e4), color-stop(100%,#1862ae)); background: -webkit-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); background: -o-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); background: -ms-linear-gradient(top,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); background: linear-gradient(to bottom,  #1f80e4 0%,#1862ae 100%); filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient( startColorstr='#1f80e4', endColorstr='#1862ae',GradientType=0 ); }
27 minutes ago
If you thought the “ambient location” craze has passed, prepare to be surprised. A company called SocialRadar is announcing today that it has raised $12.75 million in Series A funding from NEA, Grotech Ventures, and others in...
If you thought the “ambient location” craze has passed, prepare to be surprised. A company called SocialRadar is announcing today that it has raised $12.75 million in Series A funding from NEA, Grotech Ventures, and others including Steve Case, Ted Leonsis, Dave Morin and Kevin Colleran for a mobile, location-based people discovery app arriving first on the iPhone. What’s notable about the app, besides the fact that it’s arriving at a time when many have written off “people finders” as passé, is that the company’s founder and CEO is Michael Chasen, the former co-founder and CEO of Blackboard, who stepped down from his position at the company in late 2012, following its $1.64 billion exit to Providence Equity Partners in mid-2011. Blackboard may not be the most beloved learning-management system, but it did establish itself as a leader in the space, which new edtech startups today hope to disrupt. And now, Chasen believes he can push SocialRadar to the top of the “people discovery” heap as well. “One of the interesting things about Blackboard is that even though we were an enterprise software company, we really considered ourselves to be closer to the consumer,” Chasen explains. “I spent all my time on college campuses dealing with students and faculty to help put courses online.” While there, he noticed several interesting trends. Though only 56 percent of U.S. users have online profiles, on college campuses, it’s almost 95 percent. Smartphone penetration is around 60 percent in the U.S., but on college campuses, it’s over 90 percent, he says. Not only are the students more likely to carry these devices, they also use them in different ways. “They’re openly using their smartphones as location beacons and sharing their location with other people, as well as sharing their social information,” he says. But Chasen thought it was strange that although this is now the default behavior (at least within a particular demographic), there isn’t a simple way to just walk into a room, launch an app and find out who’s there and how you’re connected to them. Of course, that’s not entirely true. A number of startups including Highlight, Banjo, Sonar, and more have attacked the location-based, people discovery space with gusto over the past couple of years, with the movement really coming to a head at the annual SXSW event in Austin in 2012. Since then, however, many of the apps have struggled to find mainstream adoption. Some, like Glancee and Glassmap have sold. Others, like Kismet, have moved into new product categories. Intro pivoted. Chasen insists that SocialRadar is different from that lot, though. “I get that those applications use both location and sharing of information,” he says. One of his favorites in the group is Highlight, which he explains runs in the background and, when you’re near someone it thinks you’re interested in, it will give you an alert. “It is certainly a great app for meeting new people nearby that the Highlight algorithm thinks that you should meet, but it doesn’t give you the power to take out your phone when you walk into a room and see who’s around you,” says Chasen. Meanwhile, an app like Sonar – which does in fact tell you which of your friends are near you (and how close by) — Chasen describes as just a “straight list of people,” accompanied by others who are friends of friends. SocialRadar will instead focus on not just who’s nearby, but how you know them. For example, it would show you people who you work with, people you went to college with, and so on, not just names. But the other big differentiator between SocialRadar and the other apps, which often mine publicly available check-in data to find those nearby connections or have disregarded real privacy concerns, is that SocialRadar is meant to of
28 minutes ago
Long-time Android fans (fandroids?) will probably be familiar with Dolphin, the third-party browser that first made a name for itself during the ways when the stock Android browser left much to be desired. It’s been making some considera...
Long-time Android fans (fandroids?) will probably be familiar with Dolphin, the third-party browser that first made a name for itself during the ways when the stock Android browser left much to be desired. It’s been making some considerable strides over the past year whether you noticed or not, and today the team at MoboTap have pushed out yet another substantial update into the Google Play store. The new build plays home to a handful of significant UI tweaks — users now have one swipe access to gesture and voice commands, and can drill down their search results to focus solely on results from sites like Amazon, eBay, and YouTube. The biggest addition to the mix though? A HTML5 web app repository that gets featured prominently when you first fire up the browser. It may not seem like a huge leap for the company considering just how strongly it’s tried to play up its speedy HTML5 rendering over the past year, but Mobotap hopes that providing quick access to rich web apps will change how people interact with their phone’s browser. “We want Dolphin to be people’s second homescreen,” MoboTap corporate strategy head Edith Yeung told me. “You don’t actually need to run all these native apps, you just run things in the browser.” MoboTap says they’ve got “over 200” web apps indexed in their storefront, all of which can be added to the browser’s speed dial screen and slotted into different folders for quick access. Once you’ve got the speed dial loaded up with links it bears a passing resemblance to your typical Android homescreen, but their vision of a rich smartphone experience being contained within a browser hasn’t been achieved just yet. Yeung concedes that it’s very much a work in progress though, and that the company is working to make this particular sea change as smooth as possible — they’ve made their share of drastic changes in the past, much to the chagrin of unsuspecting users. So what’s next in MoboTap’s push to proliferate HTML5? So far we’ve seen a handful of gutsy companies make a case for the web as a platform — Google is still doggedly pushing the concept with ChromeOS and some frankly impressive hardware, while Mozilla’s Firefox OS is being loaded onto entry-level smartphones in anticipation of an impending launch this summer. That sort of hardware-inclusive approach is one hasn’t been on the table thanks to MoboTap’s size, but as far as they’re concerned branching into hardware is problematic unless you’re tremendously well-connected. “We have a very good relationship with the people at Firefox, but we have a very different theory,” Yeung added. “Firefox likes to have complete control, which is great, but from our experience working with the OEM, it’ll be different for any OEM to commit to any significant volume of phones.” Instead, the company has been spending its time and resources trying to ink potentially fruitful pre-install deals with carriers (and especially big players in southeast Asia) — MoboTap linked up with KDDI to pre-load the browser on a slew of Japanese Android phones, and it quietly locked up a similar deal with China Telecom back in January. So far, the strategy seems to be working — MoboTap confirmed that Dolphin has already been installed on over 80 million devices across the globe, though the company wouldn’t break down how many downloads came from users who found the app on their own and installs stemming from pre-install partnerships.
40 minutes ago
Reports of  widespread government surveillance aren’t a problem for just you– they’re a nightmare for Google as well. Since the initial PRISM reports dropped earlier this month, Google and other tech companies have stru...
Reports of  widespread government surveillance aren’t a problem for just you– they’re a nightmare for Google as well. Since the initial PRISM reports dropped earlier this month, Google and other tech companies have struggled to distance themselves from the claims that they give government agencies direct access to their servers. To dispel these fears, Google yesterday asked the government to allow it to disclose how many Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requests it receives. Google’s goal? To show just how limited of a relationship it has with government agencies like the NSA. While the move was obviously an important one for Google, what’s more notable is that Google made no attempt to hide why it cared so much about the PRISM paranoia: It’s killing the company’s image. “Google’s reputation and business has been harmed by the false or misleading reports in the media, and Google’s users are concerned by the allegations. Google must respond to such claims with more than generalities,” the company said in yesterday’s filing. Source: The GuardianEdward Snowden is making it a tad tougher for Google to do business. Google and its fellow tech companies are in a tough spot. Not only do they have to comply with government requests for user information, but they must also deal with claims from whistleblowers and journalists that they’re giving that information up without a fight. The problem for Google, as Google itself notes, is that no matter how misleading PRISM reports get, the law prevents the company from effectively refuting the accusations. Information requests made under FISA come with gag orders, which prevent Google from listing the requests in its annual Transparency Report. This means that, while Google can defend itself, its defense largely amounts to “just trust us” as far as FISA is concerned. For Google, the cure for this whole thing is transparency. “Google’s numbers would clearly show that our compliance with these requests falls far short of the claims being made. Google has nothing to hide,” Google wrote in a letter to the offices of the Attorney General and the FBI. For Google, which prides itself on its transparency and openness, its current predicament is an extremely dangerous one to be in. When people stop trusting Google, they stop using Google’s services, choking the company of not only data but advertising revenue as well. To see where this fear could ultimately go, consider DuckDuckGo, a private search engine that saw its best traffic ever last week. As DuckDuckGo founder Gabriel Weinberg noted, PRISM exposed just how eager people are to find alternatives to Google’s services. “We offer [an alternative] in web search, and there are others that offer it in other verticals. As people find out about these alternatives, they make that choice,” he said. That sort of thing must scare the pants off Google. PRISM has done more damage to Google’s reputation in a few days than rivals like Microsoft could ever hope to do in a decade. The situation is especially troubling because people are already paranoid about how much data Google collects about them. PRISM, then, is stirring up a perfect storm of fear that Google is trying as hard as it can to dispel. The company’s basic argument is this: Google has just as much reason to keep the government’s hands off your information as you do. Filed under: Business
43 minutes ago
The Cannes Lions mega advertising event is in full swing today in the south of France and while Twitter is marking its first year with an official presence there with a big sign at the entrance to the main venue (pictured here), and a bi...
The Cannes Lions mega advertising event is in full swing today in the south of France and while Twitter is marking its first year with an official presence there with a big sign at the entrance to the main venue (pictured here), and a big data keynote (led by Twitter’s new chief media scientist Deb Roy) to go along with it, it’s also continuing to ink deals. The latest is with Viacom, which joins ESPN, Fox and Discovery among the broadcasters who will link up ads on Twitter’s platform to ads they’re running alongside their programs. The idea behind Twitter’s ad targeting platform Amplify, first launched in May, is to create ever more, and smarter, links between the two screens to better capture the ever-fickle consumer. Video will be a key feature of Amplify, and is another reminder of why other social media platforms like Facebook are also making video moves (with its hot photo property Instagram expected to add video services very soon). Twitter’s first Viacom deal is picking an easy target: the two will create social video campaigns that will run on Twitter during the popular MTV Video Music Awards on August 25. Last year’s Video Music Awards, Twitter says, was the most popular news event on its platform last year, with 52 million votes cast via Tweets for the “Most Sharable Video” and the show itself generating 14.7 million Tweets. The biggest peak of the night went to the moment cheesy manufactured pop band One Direction won Best Pop Video with 98,307 Tweets per minute, Viacom notes. That says quite a lot about how Twitter pitches itself as mainstream, and also about how it gets used. The aim will be, in future, for at least some of those tweets — if not all — to get linked up in two ways. One will be in terms of analytics to help give advertisers and TV companies an idea of what their viewers are interested in. The other will be to figure out when and where they are most likely to see an ad, based on their interactions on Twitter. “Our technology has automated ad detection. We know where and when each national commercial airs,” Roy noted today during his Cannes Lions presentation. “It’s no accident that Twitter [has] emerged as the prime platform for social soundtrack. It’s live [and] goes hand in hand with TV,” he added later. Roy, an associate professor at MIT’s Media Lab, came to Twitter via the company’s acquisition of BlueFin Labs, where he was the co-founder, and he made liberal use of his big data chops, with visuals of what he called the “social soundtrack” for different locations that visualized the “noise” coming from them across different times of day. This is more to try to indicate that this works than to give any huge insight. In Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, for example, the highlighted sections indicate times when people are tweeting less. Those coincide with calls to prayer, he noted: Going down the line, future Viacom campaigns will also involve social video — likely appearing the form of Twitter cards — which will take place around events on VH1, CMT, Nickelodeon, COMEDY CENTRAL, TV Land and Spike and more. “The VMAs virtually pioneered the social TV moment, triggering a demand among marketers to tap into the fan conversations and trending topics that Viacom networks create every day,” Jeff Lucas, Head of Sales, Music and Entertainment, Viacom Media Networks, said in a statement. “Through this partnership, we’re allowing marketers to insert their brands seamlessly into the torrent of fan activity and engagement around our networks on Twitter.” “As events happen in life, we continue to see Twitter as the place people share those moments, especially when those events happen on TV,” Adam Bain, President of Global Revenue at Twitter, added also in the news release. Image: Twitter
about 1 hour ago
Oh dear, it hasn’t been a good few weeks for Silicon Valley. Along with the NSA scandal, there appears to be more and more criticism of Big Tech from mainstream, heavyweight American journalists like Nicholas Thompson and Paul Krug...
Oh dear, it hasn’t been a good few weeks for Silicon Valley. Along with the NSA scandal, there appears to be more and more criticism of Big Tech from mainstream, heavyweight American journalists like Nicholas Thompson and Paul Krugman. And leading the charge in this Silicon Valley bashing is the New Yorker staff writer and award-winning author George Packer. In both his new book, The Unwinding, and particularly in his recent New Yorker story “Change The World”, Packer warns that the love affair is over and Silicon Valley has lost its resonance with the rest of America. Packer should know. He grew up in Mountain View when it was a sleepy little town in the Valley of Heart’s Delight, not much different from any other middle class American community. But now, Packer told me, the “massive wealth” in Mountain View and the rest of Silicon Valley makes it “as far from North Carolina as Burma.” So what needs to change in Silicon Valley, I asked Packer, if it is to make itself relevant once again with the rest of America. Firstly, Packer told me, Silicon Valley needs to develop “daring” and “adventurous” technological advances that solve big problems. And secondly, he says, we’ve got to “scale down” our “self-regard” and recognize that we aren’t essentially different from any other successful industry and thus aren’t really changing the world. So are we going to listen to the advice of grown-ups like George Packer? Or are we going to continue to build products designed to make life more efficient for privileged 20-year-olds, thereby making ourselves more and more irrelevant to the needs of ordinary Americans?
about 1 hour ago