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A different kind of Facebook privacy issue

Biznology

Image via Wikipedia. I've been in Europe the last ten days (coming home today) and it's easy to see how European cultures differ from that of America, especially when it comes to privacy. Tags: Social Media Marketing facebook google privacy socialmedia socialnetwork twitter. Facebook might not need the money.

Privacy 80
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Optimizing for Bing & DuckDuckGo

Method and Metric

So it can be easy to forget about other search engines like Bing (the default search engine on Microsoft products and Amazon Kindles) and DuckDuckGo (the privacy-focused “search engine that doesn’t track you”). So be sure to include exact, targeted keywords in meta tags, header tags, and your copy. DuckDuckGo. Focus Local.

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Wake up to the Internet of Things

Biznology

Photo credit: Wikipedia. While we are already seeing simple examples of this in surveillance cameras and sensors, there are clearly benefits and concerns, for example privacy issues, that will stretch well beyond our comfort zone. Privacy, for all practical purposes, is gone.

Privacy 80
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Search + Social = Online Reputation Management

Biznology

When you’re already in the millionaires and billionaires club, privacy and discretion do work — until it doesn’t. There a lot more information I could go into. Actually control. There’s the rub. What of Bing and Yahoo!? Well, if you can make Google dance then Bing and Yahoo! will be eating out of your hands.

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How to Measure Digital Marketing With Observer Effects

Biznology

Image courtesy of Wikipedia. Most countries have laws that prevent companies from gathering personally identifiable information ( PII ) and using it to target individuals. The reason for the laws, I hope, is consumer pressure to prevent companies from violating user privacy. When users find out about this, they get angry.

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How much do you “charge” for your content?

Chris Koch

Image via Wikipedia. Yet while generally we can’t put a price tag on our content, we do charge for it. For example, there is no way that the typical Webinar is worth as much as an in-depth research report, yet we make buyers give us the same amount of information for both—we charge them the same price. The price will change.

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How much do you “charge” for your content?

Chris Koch

Image via Wikipedia. Yet while generally we can’t put a price tag on our content, we do charge for it. For example, there is no way that the typical Webinar is worth as much as an in-depth research report, yet we make buyers give us the same amount of information for both—we charge them the same price. The price will change.