Nov 8

We have now hit a point in time in which advertising is positioned as a value-add, not to marketers, but to users. I can’t say I’m not intrigued by the concept, if only to see if people will buy the shtick or see through it as total BS (ah yes, my first BS-related pun ever).Facebook notes:

Advertising doesn’t have to be about interrupting what you’re doing, but getting the right information about the purchases you make when you want it.

Much appreciated, I guess. And it makes perfect logical sense. This is why the contextual Google ads are such a success. But it fits better on Google, because “searching” has a much more natural bridge to buying. “Socializing,” however, doesn’t have that. Consequently, the ad model feels unnaturally shoehorned into Facebook. Never have I visited Facebook with a product or purchase intent in mind. Not to say it won’t work - at worst, it’ll provide better results compared to the randomizer ads they put out now - but the opportunities for it to work will be much more limited compared to Google, IMO.Also on a separate note, there’s been some recent buzz about Facebook replacing Yahoo as part of the “big 3,” along with Google and Microsoft. That’s the most retarded thing I’ve heard this week. And anyone who thinks so, is by extension, a moron. Facebook gets to be in the big 3 when it stops having its traffic quintupled by Yahoo or when its real market cap hits $37B+, not when internet geeks play chutes and ladders with imaginary numbers.

May 20

…too much cash, no $@#!ing clue.What could you do with the $1-1.6 billion they have earmarked for Facebook or Bebo or the next hot SNS?Steps 1-5:Fix Yahoo! 360 so it doesn’t suck (or just start over): $25 million (I’m being very generous with figures here)Pay the top 100,000 MySpace/Facebook/Bebo/etc. users $1,000 each to hang on the new and improved Yahoo! 360. (total: $100 million)Pay each of those users $10 for each new friend they bring over, up to 90 million friends: $900 million.Massive marketing/PR for general promotion and to handle all the bribery bad press: $200 millionCharitable donations, just for the heck of it: $375 millionStep 6: ???Step 7: ProfitGrand total spent: $1.6 billion, give or take several hundred million dollars on tactical variations.

May 7

If someone were to ask me about an example of wasted time and effort, I’d point to Yahoo’s partnership with Gracenote. A centralized, official database of lyrics is a solid idea. The implementation of tying into their search results is a fine, obvious idea.However, Techcrunch notes that, “copyright restrictions force them to show lyrics as an image instead of free text, to avoid scraping.”  It’s inane restrictions like this that give piracy a capitalistic, if not moral, platform to flourish. So I can either go the legal route and use an end product which is almost completely inferior to the illegal route of finding lyrics on one of a million fan sites. My question as a consumer in a capitalistic society, is why? What’s my motivation?