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December 15, 2006

Web 2.0 news: 15 December 2006

BuyagiftBuyAGift.co.uk, a north London online retailing and voucher-fulfilment company that began trading just seven years ago, has been recognised as one of the UK's fastest growing companies in the Sunday Times Virgin Atlantic Fast Track 100. Fast Track 100’ ranks Britain's hundred private companies with the fastest growing sales over the last three years. The Enfield-based company made its debut at 55 in the Fast Track list, published by the Sunday Times on 3rd December 2006. The company's growth reflects the increasing importance of Internet shopping and electronic commerce in the UK.

Mashable have scooped an exclusive, announcing that social networking site Bebo have launched Bebo Widgets, with over 100,000 being created in the first 12 hours: "For now, they’re supporting RockYou, Photobucket and Slide.com, with RockYou offering the most advanced options. Users have a special section in their profiles where these widgets are embedded, and multiple widgets can be added"

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Interview: Nokia's Kaj Haggman on how they're putting Web 2.0 widgets on your mobile phone

haggman-nokia.jpgThere’s been a lot of talk about the coming together of Web 2.0 and mobile. But a lot of it’s just that: talk. It seems logical that people will want to do similar things on their mobiles that they will on Web 2.0 services, albeit with extra elements of location and/or search thrown in to take advantage of the mobile phone.

But in a less high-profile corner of Nokia, the Emerging Business Unit, they’ve already created one application that’s attacking this convergance head-on. It’s called WidSets, and its nearest parallel is the Dashboard widgets on Mac computers, in that it pulls down information from websites to your phone, via RSS feeds, into the WidSets Java application.

You can pull down news stories, blog posts, Flickr photo streams, emails and weather forecasts, to name a few examples. Okay, so it might just be a slick RSS reader with a graphical user interface, but it’s easy enough to use that it could appeal beyond the tech-head community. I talked to Nokia’s Kaj Haggman to find out more.

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January 8, 2007

Web 2.0 news: Second Life, Nokia & Vox, ChaCha, Insider Pages, Bebo bookstore

Second LifeCreative Imagination asks if the Web 2.0 bubble is close to bursting already, or whether some of the companies that are failing (citing Filmloop and Jobster) just got into the game too late with nothing innovative to add.

Online Marketing Blog has an interview with Amanda Watlington about getting involved with search marketing, her appreciation for being hands on with the work, her thoughts on marketing via Second Life, the DMA Search Engine Marketing Certification program, tips on business blogging and the power of networking.

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January 10, 2007

Web 2.0 news: LinkedIn, Technorati tags, Yahoo acquires MyBlogLog

LinkedInLinkedIn is a social network that is supposed to bring you closer to the sort of people that can progress your career, social standing, prospects, and general life, but which has come under significant fire for (in layman's terms) being a waste of time. Akkam's Razor writes on how to get the most out of LinkedIn.

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January 12, 2007

Web 2.0 news: MySpace France, Cranky, Shoutfit, YouTube beats MySpace

MySpace FranceMashable reports that MySpace France came out of beta testing yesterday: "The significance of MySpace France is that it competes against Skyblog, the undisputed champion of the French blogging scene. Skyblog is owned by French radio station Skyrock, and has its own plans to expand across Europe and even launch a US version. The question is whether MySpace, which had 1.3 million uniques in France in November compared to 7 million unique visitors to Skyblog, can make any progress there."

TechCrunch asks whether older people really need their own set of web 2.0 sites, as another site for over 50s - a search engine called Cranky - launches.

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January 15, 2007

Interview: Phanfare co-founder Mark Heinrich on the death of free photo-sharing services

phanfare_founders.jpgWhile at CES last week, I caught up with Mark Heinrich, chief technology officer and co-founder of Phanfare. It's an online photo and video sharing service that stands out through its use of a subscription model, charging $54.95 a year.

"We have the audacity to charge our customers money!" he told me. "That's why we call them customers, and not users. And because there's no advertising, we don't turn your private photo albums into some kind of billboard for adverts or print-ordering services."

Phanfare started in January 2005, and now has over 5,000 users, 80% of which pay the annual subscription fee (as opposed to the monthly or lifetime options that are available). And Heinrich has strong views on the prospects - or lack of - for Phanfare's free competition.

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Web 2.0 news: Leafletter, Helphee beta, Sidekiq search, Facebook stats, Zpeech, Shuzak, Blinkx gets sporty

Widgets are becoming very popular at the moment, and the latest startup to take advantage of them is Leafletter which allows anyone to make Flash widgets (or "little websites" as they describe them) Joe Anderson at Webby's World describes the service.

HelpheeComing soon (apparently) is an online help document generator called Helphee. At present it's pre-launch, and they're collecting email addresses to notify people when they launch (I've seen that before). Their tag line at present is "author and publish help documents online in 5 minutes or less". I don't think anyone will be authoring Vista manuals on this, but it sounds interesting. We'll keep you posted...

Sidekiq is another interestingly-named search engine that will search through a whole range of different types of media and individual engines. It all sounds very promising, though compared to Google it seems over-complicated. Whether it will catch on remains to be seen - search is a very crowded area of the web.

Markus Frind CEO of Plentyoffish.com reports that Venturebeat has recorded some numbers on social networking site Facebook:

  • 6 Billion pageviews a month

  • $700,000 a month in revenue in December
  • $410,000 loss in December.
  • 16 million unique users a month.

Zpeech is another chat-about-this-website service. They're a nice touch, but the fact there are a number of these services about means that any interesting commentary gets dispersed. If the original site allows its own comments, it can also be cut out of the loop because 'eternalised' comments made on Zpeech are stored on that service.

And whilst we're on the 'more of the same' vein, Shuzak is a 'social network for geeks' that could already be fulfilled by Digg or even Slashdot (oh, sorry, that's "news for nerds").

Blinkx has branched out again and now has a large collection of sports videos courtesy of its new partnership with online sports broadcaster NBX. Blinkx may not be YouTube in terms of popularity, but it's building a nice service that doesn't seem to be quite so bogged down with "my mate just fell over" videos.

January 16, 2007

Shopping and social networking: a match made in heaven?

That's real-world shopping, I mean. Digital agency IconNicholson has unveiled a concept it calls "social retailing", in a press release that impressively shoehorns in Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Near Field Communication AND Web 2.0.

The concept is being shown off at this week's National Retail Federation show in New York. It's basically a shop that lets The Kids interact using text messaging, IM and email as they browse the frocks (which for the show have been supplied by fashion designer Nanette Lepore). It also includes NFC technology to monitor stock and make the checkout process more secure.

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Mobile 2.0 from Yahoo! and 3 Group

Following last week's iPhone announcement, mobile phone operators have been falling over themselves to improve their mobile internet services, Mobile Marketing Magazine reports. The latest such development stems from the partnership between 3 Group and Yahoo!, who joined forces in June 2006, and will now work together to provide 3 Group customers in Italy, Ireland, Sweden, Denmark, and the UK with Yahoo! Go for Mobile 2.0. Irish 3 Group customers will also get access to Yahoo! Search.

The Yahoo! Go for Mobile 2.0 services on offer will include Yahoo! Go 2.0, “an innovative new application that redefines the mobile Internet experience for consumers through a unique product design, ability to personalize with content from the entire Internet and a reinvention of mobile search”, Yahoo! oneSearch, Yahoo! Mail, and Yahoo! Messenger.

The collaboration is not set to end with Europe, however - 3 Group is also looking to expand its existing services within Asia and Australia.

Mobile media creation and sharing from JuiceCaster

True mobile 2.0 is here at last, or so say Juice Wireless. The authors of JuiceCaster 4.0 claim that their baby is the first application which will allow users to create and share rich media between mobile phones and the internet, Mobile Marketing Magazine reports. In addition to the expected shared and accessible content, JuiceCaster 4.0 will allow real-time distribution of pictures and videos.

Media can be created using either mobile phones or computers, and can then be shared with a range of devices, and is compatible with the majority of cameraphones available in the UK, the US, Finland, Italy, Germany, France, and Spain.

Juicecaster 4.0 is free via the JuiceCaster website, and registration includes a MediaBox, an internet storage device which automatically stores pictures and videos taken with your chosen mobile device. Furthering the whole community social-networking web 2.0 ethos is the MediaBox's shareability: content is easily shared with Xanga, MySpace, Friendster, and Blogger, among other sites. Similar to YouTube, the JuiceCaster MediaBox also features channels for other users to subscribe to; channel content can be displayed on mobile phones, iPods, and computers.

Yahoo explains its new oneSearch mobile search service

Yahoo Ojas RegeIt was a busy week at CES for Yahoo, which made a bunch of announcements. Among them was news of a new mobile search service called oneSearch, which is currently part of Yahoo's beta Go for Mobile 2.0 application, but will be introduced to its mobile web and SMS services by the end of January.

"Today's mobile search is horribly terribly broken," says Ojas Rege, senior director of mobile products at Yahoo, who I caught up with at the show.

"What happens so often is that companies take things that work on the PC and bring them to the mobile phone. So what works on a PC, when I enter a search term and want a bunch of links back to do research, doesn't work on a mobile phone. Those links break, or take me to sites that don't work very well, which take 10 seconds to reach."

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ROK monkeys around with sports news

While 3G has been occupying the majority of non-iPhone mobile news, 2.5G handsets have been silently improving, with ROK's push to deliver TV services to the phones, Mobile Marketing Magazine reports. In addition to the existing ROK TV and FreeBe services currently available to 2.5G handsets in the UK, the US, Turkey, China, and Thailand, ROK has launched 'Monkey Sports News', a live sports news channel.

What's newsworthy about Monkey Sports News, however, is the way it's put together. ROK combined speech recognition software with a live text feed of sports news, creating a channel where the news is 'read' by CG animals. The technology is patent-pending, and uses mass-market 2.5G GPRS to stream video.

Joost aims to give TV a Web 2.0 spin

JoostSkype co-founders Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis have taken the wraps off their new venture, which was codenamed The Venice Project, but is now called... Joost. Well, I guess the domain name was available. So what is it? An internet TV venture that the duo says combines the best of TV with Web 2.0-style choice, control and flexibility.

At its core, it's pretty TV-like, with programmes, channels and ads - the latter is presumably where the revenues are going to come from. Around that is full-featured search functionality and social networking features including chat. It's PC-only at the moment, although Mac and Linux versions are in development.

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TechCrunch UK writers resurface at Vecosys

VecosysBit late on this one, but if you were wondering what TechCrunch UK's Sam Sethi and Mike Butcher would do next after the messy demise of that blog, well, you don't have to wait any more. The pair have popped up at Vecosys, whose strapline is "Tracking Europe's Tech Venture Ecosystem". It's sure to be required reading for anyone wanting a European slant on this whole Web 2.0 malarkey.

Will Web widgets rule 2007?

Fascinating post over at The Next Net about how we'll be seeing a helluva lot more Web widgets in 2007:

"The reason Web widgets are important is because they are the most concrete manifestation of something else that is happening. The Web is splintering. Centralized portals don't matter anymore in an era when Google and Digg will filter the ever-changing Web for you much more efficiently. Or you can filter it yourself with a few well-chosen widgets, and bring it to your own particular corner of the Web."

Writer Erick Schonfeld also makes the point that widgets could herald the death of the page view as a measure of site popularity. Will advertisers be demanding to know site-owners' widget rating instead? Which should at least be entertaining if Jonathan Ross ever presents any new media industry awards...

US and UK mobile social networking

Mobile social networking on both sides of the pond is dominated by MySpace and Windows Live Spaces, new research from Telephia has found. Brits uploading mobile phone content onto the web are most likely to use MySpace, Windows Live Spaces, and YouTube, while in America YouTube is replaced with the college students' favourite, Facebook.

Telephia's statistics, reported by Mobile Marketing Magazine, shows that 21% of British mobile social networkers are devoted to MySpace, 18% are enamoured with Windows Live Spaces, 9% are dedicated YouTubers, and a further 9% love Bebo. While PCs are still used to upload media onto the internet, Telephia points to the recent rise in mobile social networking as a sign that 2007 will be the year in which the medium begins to benefit from its staggering growth potential.

The majority of mobile social networkers are in their teens and early twenties, with twice as many UK mobile social networkers coming from the 15-17 age group as from the population as a whole.

In the US MySpace has effectively cornered the market in mobile social networking in the 15-17 market, with 69% of that age group using it as their primary host of photos and videos. Mobile social networkers as a whole also prefer to use MySpace, which was the top choice of 32% of mobile social networkers. Facebook has a 13% share, and Windows Live Spaces 11%.

January 17, 2007

Web 2.0 news: Burying Digg stories, Technorati woes, Wikiseek, Boxxet, Nimbuzz Talk

DiggTony Hung has written an interesting post about articles getting buried on Digg, reflecting on the 'black box' that determines how easy it is for a group of people to bury articles or even entire sites:

"Digg needs to have its population police its own content, because it doesn’t have the manpower (two guys at last count) to try and do it themselves. This leaves room for enormous abuse, as individuals can bury stories with abandon and get entire domains banned with little recourse to getting them reinstated, since the a large part of the process is automated.

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Podfitness revamps iPod workout service, signs up celebs

podfitness.pngPodfitness claims to be the world's first "customised audio personal training service", and I won't argue with it. It's a service that creates personalised podcasts, with exercise instructions given by over 80 personal trainers, mixed with your own tunes and then downloaded onto your iPod or MP3 player.

It costs $19.99 a month, and has just revamped its service, adding a new Dashboard and easier user interface, making workouts more customised, adding Calendar and Journal features, and providing a Trainer matching system to suggest trainers and programs that match your fitness profile (I wonder if there's an 'unfit kebab muncher' profile...)

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Live Messenger MeeGos coming to mobile: but why?

MeeGosMobile firm Hands On Mobile has signed a deal with 3H Group, to bring the latter's MeeGos avatars to mobile. They're the animated graphics that can be used within Windows Live Messenger IM conversations, and are used by over 24 million people (just under 9% of the total Messenger users).

What I want to know is how they'll be used in mobile. Hands On says it'll develop a "broad range" of MeeGos mobile products, encompassing "games, personalisation and lifestyle". Which hopefully means something more ambitious than just wallpapers and animated ringtones.

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Thought-leader users deserve equal platform to journalists, says CNET

suzie.jpgReally good post over on the Guardian's Organ Grinder blog reporting on an event at the Association of Online Publishers focusing on building communities around content. Suzie Daniels, head of business media at CNET Networks, talked about their approach to user-generated content.

"We want to enable those thought-leading people to engage with the site and give them a platform equal with our editorial team," she said. "And if we can get our thought leaders to contribute, the lurkers will benefit more."

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Rupert Murdoch to keynote 2007 Media Summit

murdoch.jpgEager to see what News Corp has planned next in the Web 2.0 world? Rupert Murdoch is one of the keynote interviews at next month's 2007 Media Summit in New York, where he'll be fielding questions from BusinessWeek's Stephen Adler.

What questions would you like to ask Rupe? I'd be keen to know if he ever considered buying YouTube, how MySpace could interact more with News Corp's various media properties, and whether he'll give me several million quid for the vague idea for a Web 2.0 service that I sketched on the back of a napkin last night (sorry, can't say more, it's pre-Alpha...)

That interview's on February 8th, but the previous day, Barry Diller of InterActiveCorp and Expedia will be doing a similar Q&A session. It's a formiddable pairing, although wouldn't it be more fun if the two media moguls had to interview each other? Just a thought.

January 18, 2007

Deloitte announces tech predictions for 2007

crystal-ball.jpgHurrah for January, the time when experts everywhere can make their predictions for the year ahead, safe in the knowledge that in 12 months time, they'll have been forgotten, ready for the next round of futuregazing.

Deloitte's Technology, Media and Telecoms industry group has just unveiled its predictions for 2007. The most relevant (to this blog at least) are:

The evolution of social networking. Including improvements in identification, and making it quicker and easier for services to remove copyrighted material quickly. I'm wondering if 2007 could also some lawsuits being flung around in this area, likely aimed at the few user-generated content services that are actually making money.

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Hollywood looks to UGC as pipeline of new talent

veoh.jpgInteresting news in today's FT of a deal between internet TV firm Veoh and Hollywood talent agency United Talent Agency to set up an online TV channel to discover new talent. Apparently the deal was brokered by former Disney exec Michael Eisner, one of the major stakeholders in Veoh.

Veoh's CEO Danny Shapiro has described the new channel as "the new gateway for talent discovery in Hollywood", although Veoh will also be selling advertising around the channel.

In theory, UGC sites like Veoh are good proving grounds for new talent, although it remains to be seen if the videos that are popular among users translate well to movies. The proof will come if, in 12-18 months time, UTA has signed up anyone via Veoh, and put them on the big screen.

(via FT.com)

DayZ Loop online TV targets teenage girls

DayZ LoopMany people believe 2007 will be the year when social networks and video-sharing sites start to splinter into niche services aimed at specific demographic groups, split by age, gender, nationality or interests.

Early evidence comes with the launch of DayZ Loop, which claims to be an "online infotainment television network" aimed at teenage girls (specifically, 13 to 17 year-olds). The site's aiming to attract users with a mix of video content, social networking, workshops and editorial content.

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January 19, 2007

DayZ Loop teen TV follow-up

DayZ LoopYesterday, I wrote about the launch of DayZ Loop, an online TV network aimed at teenage girls. I had a couple of questions: one about how advertising would work on the community, and also over whether its focus on 'infotainment' would appeal to a wide base of users.

Renee Steiger, creator of strategic alliances at the company, got in touch today with some more info on both of those. Let's start with the latter point.

"Believe it or not, our teen girl members - as well as some other recent market studies - show that girls get tired of the 'in your face' aspect of some other sites," she says. "Also, they often feel uncomfortable with being approached by strangers who may have ulterior motives."

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Orange takes on Flickr with Pikeo photo-sharing community

pikeo.jpgIt can't be easy launching a new photo-sharing site. After all, once you've uploaded hundreds of your pics to one place online, it's a real faff when you then have to upload them all again if you switch loyalties to another service.

Nevertheless, plenty of firms want Flickr's crown, and the latest is Pikeo, which has been launched by Orange. As you'd expect, mobile is strongly tied in, with the site providing a link to the ShoZu mobile application, which allows users to upload photos directly from their phones.

Presumably, Orange will be preloading the app on handsets sold through its retail stores if the community takes off.

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January 22, 2007

U4Prez: social networking gets political

you.jpgWhile us Brits wait for Tony Blair to pack his bags at some point this year, the US is gearing up for its next presidential election in 2008. Hillary Clinton's in, choosing to launch her campaign via (what else) an online video message.

But a new site, U4Prez, is promising to let anyone run for president with their own virtual online campaign. Which makes it a MySpace for bedroom politicos. Launching officially on February 1st, it lets users post profiles, sound off on hot issues, and campaign to win support from other users. Although won't they all be trying to become virtual president themselves?

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Web 2.0 news: iJigg, MySpace issues, Web 2.0 usability, Hi5, Get a First Life

iJigg logoIt's another iService. iJigg at least has some reference to the service it is providing, and is also a play on "Digg", because it's a music ratings service. I like music discovery services, though as TechCrunch points out, this system is as susceptible to vote rigging as Digg is. The music is only playable via the service itself, or any web site that embeds the music, so at present there's no way to download the music (I suppose you could record it the old-fashioned way)

Mashable reports on the ongoing saga of MySpace (supposedly) disabling Flash support. It seems that nearly all is well again.

Meanwhile, MySpace is being sued by parents whose children had been abused by people they met online. It's a horrendous situation and raises the interesting point of how much responsibility parents should take for the well-being of their kids online. A lot, I say.

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January 23, 2007

Ad-supported music downloads firm SpiralFrog runs into trouble

spiralfrog.jpgDownload songs for free, in return for watching a few ads. It sounds like a great deal if you're a music fan. Yet SpiralFrog, the company bidding to be the first to launch such a business model, appears to have run into problems.

Several executives have left the company since Christmas, and it has only signed up one of the major record labels, Universal. The company also missed its original launch date of late last year, although it reportedly still plans to go ahead with a launch next month.

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Esociallife blends personal and business social networking

esociallife.jpgLike many web users, I'm happy with a clear separation between my MySpace and LinkedIn profiles.

One's for personal stuff (i.e. signing up as many unknown indie bands as friends as possible in the hope that one of them will get big and make me look like a supertalent spotter), and the other is for business contacts.

I'm not sure I'd want the two worlds to come together. However, this appears to be the thinking behind Esociallife, a new networking site that's launching next month, and aims to combine "both social and business interactions".

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Web 2.0 news: 3D web, Twitter, MySpace updates, vSocial, Wikio

Twitter logoRead/Write Web contemplates whether 3D interfaces on the web are useful or a novelty, taking a look at their use in virtual reality gaming, online shopping, 3D Digg, web statistics, and more, concluding that 3D is not yet ready for the general browsing experience.

GigaOM writes that the broadcast tool Twitter is increasingly being used by companies.

Mashable reports on updates to MySpace, who are introducing localised Amber Alerts for missing children, plus signup email verification, and an optional tool preventing adults from contacting under 18s.

Mashable report on vSocial launching vQuote, which allows users to pick out specific sections of a video and save it with tags and a description.

TechCrunch reports that Digg-esque Wikio has secured €4m in Series A funding.

January 24, 2007

YSN.com: social networking with a motivational twist

ysn.jpgIt stands for Your Success Network, and is billing itself as "a networking site where you can do more than stalk your Ex". Because that's what people use MySpace for, presumably. Forget all that music rubbish.

Sorry, not to be cynical. YSN is the work of motivational gurus Jennifer Kushell and Scott M. Kaufman, who you may know from their book 'Secrets of the Young & Successful: How To Get Everything You Want Without Waiting A Lifetime'.

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Beta? It's the four-letter word of Web 2.0

There's a simply marvellous article over on CNET by Caroline McCarthy taking the Web 2.0 crowd to task for clinging to Beta status in an effort to excuse shonky features.

"You've probably come to rely on those four little letters, positioned snugly next to your site's cerulean-and-pink logo. To you, it's a reassurance. It means it's OK if the photo upload tool occasionally times out, if the YouTube embed codes aren't quite working yet, if the Google Maps mashups sometimes display Saskatchewan instead of San Francisco."

Just read it. Especially if you're running a Web 2.0 company...

January 25, 2007

Web 2.0 news: CBBC World, MyStartSpace, Fox pursue YouTube uploaders

CBBC LogoI've always been impressed with the online presence of the Children's BBC crowd, though I think the latest news, that CBBC may be working on a kid-friendly Second Life clone, could be a real resource hog. There are so many more factors that need to be considered when launching a service specifically for minors, such as privacy, parental consent, and moderation. If this goes ahead there could be a few more jobs opening up at the BBC. There's no doubt that many 7-12 year-olds know exactly what Second Life and virtual worlds are all about.

Mashable reports on the Google-MySpace Startpage: MyStartSpace - it's not official but it does look interesting.

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January 29, 2007

Consumers trust user reviews when it comes to holiday-booking

tripadvisor.jpgIt's not such a big surprise, but nevertheless, useful proof of how consumers trust each other rather than industry or professional views when it comes to booking holidays online.

Nielsen//NetRatings asked 863 Brits which online source they most trust, 21% said user review sites like TripAdvisor, while 15% plumped for professional review sites, 15% for official tourist board sites, 12% for travel agent sites, and 11% for search engines.

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MailSting aims for mobile MySpace/Hotmail/Jamster/Flickr mashup

mailsting.jpgMailSting, which launches today, is billing itself as a 'communications and content portal', which offers a mix of email, file sharing, social networking and blogging features, with a strong mobile angle.

Initially free, users get 100MB of email space, 100MB of storage for media files, and their own SMS/MMS mobile inbox. The service claims to work with PDAs and PSPs, as well as mobile phones.

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January 30, 2007

73% of YouTube users don't want video adverts

youtube_logo.jpgHmm, could be a slight obstacle to this new 'make money by placing ads alongside YouTube videos' strategy that Google's just announced. Well, kind of.
Harris Interactive has been conducting some research into YouTube, and claims that nearly three quarters of adults who frequently visit the site would visit it a lot (31%) or a little (42%) less if it included short commercials before every video on the site.

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Web 2.0 sites targeted by malware authors

Security firm ScanSafe claims that Web 2.0 sites are increasingly being targeted by malware authors, because of their growing popularity and reliance on the browser.

The company says it saw an increase in the number of attacks specifically on the browser, and claims that "up to" one in 600 pages on social networking sites contain malware. Of course, that "up to" could mean the