Wednesday 15 April 2015

3 Digital Marketing Channels That Work for Every Advertiser

As an advertiser, your core objective is to prioritize investment in relevant communication channels that deliver maximum returns for your business. With plenty of studies proving digital marketing ROI, it makes perfect sense to leverage digital channels for promoting your brand and its products and services.
But with so many online advertising channels available, how do you go about picking the best channel for your business? You must do a fine balancing act between your advertising budget and the costs of using a particular channel. Here are three digital channels that will allow you to make the most of your advertising budget:

1. Google AdWords.

With a lion’s share of PPC market (roughly 67%), the use of Google AdWords is a no brainer. There are plenty of businesses that have driven traffic to their site, marketed their products/services and ultimately increased sales by leveraging Google AdWords.
I know there are some business owners who stay away from PPC because they believe it eats into a large portion of their marketing spend. Unfortunately, they are making a big mistake. AdWords delivers measurable results and is worth the investment. Your ads get viewed right when your target audience is searching for the products/services you are selling. The results are faster than SEO, and you can also set a budget for your campaign, which allows you to control your advertising costs.
Add to that a collection of features like Ad CustomizersCall Out ExtensionsGoogle AdWords EditorHTML 5 Ads and you have a channel that helps deliver a marketing message the way your audience wants to hear it. What’s more, you can even identify if and when an ad leads to an offline sale. That’s a huge advantage.
The great thing is there are plenty of tools you can use to optimize your returns from Google AdWords. These range from Bidable, which offers quick automation and real-time bidding with no minimum spend for small businesses to Kenshoo, an enterprise-level tool that automates your AdWords workflow and allows you to make bulk changes to your campaigns.


LinkedIn’s Newest App, Elevate, Helps Employees Share Content & Helps Employers View Results

A new social sharing & scheduling app from LinkedIn has a unique wrinkle: It allows employers to track effectiveness and results that employees bring the company through social media.

The corporate world is now very much a social world, and LinkedIn is looking to capitalize on this with their new app Elevate. This tool is geared towards those employees that haven’t really owned social media and need help, and a system to get them there.
  • To help users curate content
  • Allow users to easily share content on LinkedIn and Twitter
  • To measure the impact of user efforts
Employees can see how many times content they’ve shared has been liked, commented on, and reshared, and how many people it reached. Soon they’ll get even more insights, like who viewed their profile and requested to connect as a result of the content they shared. LinkedIn Elevate provides companies with the same data, as well as numerous micro-conversions – like job views and Company Page followers – and results that impact the bottom-line – like hires, leads, and sales.
Elevate was built by LinkedIn as a desktop app with three goals:
Of course, Elevate is entering a very crowded space in marketing technology. With tried and true solutions like Buffer and Hootsuite LinkedIn will be facing some stiff competition. One game changer of Elevate is the corporate appeal. According to LinkedIn, Elevate will allow:
This is unique as a company can invest in a tool and be given exact data on how effective it has been for the company itself, not the individuals’ accounts.  It’s always been problematic to invest in employees that work to build their own personal account, just to see that value head out the door with them when they leave for their next gig. Elevate could help change this mentality and is the first tool if its kind that is so clearly geared towards employers.

Facebook Ad CTR Up 17%, CPC Down 17% In Q1 [Nanigans Report]

Facebook advertisers reached more customers per ad and paid less for each click in the first quarter of 2015, according to advertising automation software provider Nanigans’ Global Facebook Advertising Benchmark Report released today.
Nanigans’ customers had a 0.81% click-through rate in the first quarter, up 17% over Q4 of 2014 and 260% over this time last year. In the ecommerce vertical, CTR increased 12% QoQ and 281% YoY.

On a cost-per click basis, ads were 17% cheaper than they were in the fourth quarter — the 53 cent CPC average falling to pre-holiday levels because of, according to Nanigans, reduced demand after the Q4 shopping season. The CPC drop was especially pronounced for ecommerce advertisers, who experienced a 32% decrease in the quarter and a 14% reduction YoY. Gaming advertisers saw a 11% quarterly CPC increase and 69% for the year. Overall, CPC averages increased 4% YoY.
Overall global CPMs (cost per 1,000 impressions) dropped 3% in the quarter to $4.26, but soared 273% since the first quarter of 2014 when they were $1.14. Ecommerce CPMs — $3.74 — fell 24% in the quarter and gained 227% YoY.
Nanigans, a Facebook Marketing Partner, said most advertisers using its software have direct response goals and dedicate the overwhelming majority of budgets to Unpublished Page Post Ads, Mobile App Install Ads and Domain Ads, categories that represented 97% of spending through Nanigans in Q1.
The company notes that many of its customers use ROI-based bidding algorithms targeting high-value and high-ROI audiences that typically cost more to reach. “As such, the data in this report should not be used as a proxy for the overall Facebook marketplace,” the report stated.
The company also noted that advertisers using its software are adopting new Facebook ad products, spending 2.8 times more on video ads and 5.2 times more on multi-product ads this quarter than they did in the final quarter of 2014.


Tuesday 14 April 2015

Microsoft Acquires Mobile Business Intelligence Service Datazen

Microsoft today announced that it has acquired Datazen, a mobile business intelligence and data visualization service.
Datazen, which launched about three years ago, allows businesses to create mobile dashboards from data in Microsoft Excel, but also from other cloud and enterprise database sources. To run Datazen, enterprises need to run Windows Server, IIS and .NET behind their firewalls, as well as Datazen’s server software.
The company offers apps for Windows, Windows Phone, iOS, Android and the web. According to today’s announcement, all of its products will remain available for the time being and the team will continue to work on Datazen’s server and client products.

Starting today, Microsoft SQL Server Enterprise Edition customers (version 2008 and up) can already download Datazen’s server software at no cost.
“Datazen is positioned as a mobile BI solution for customers who need a solution that is implemented on-premises,” the Datazen team writes today. “As such, it will complement Power BI, Microsoft’s cloud-based business analytics service.”
Microsoft will likely integrate Datazen’s technologies and expertise into its Power BI product, but it’s unclear what the roadmap for this integration looks like. If Microsoft’s latest acquisitions are any indication, there is a chance that the company will take some of Datazen’s mobile applications and rebrand them as Power BI for iOS or Android.

6 Sins You’re Committing on Bing Ads

Did you know that when you think you are "Googling”, you might actually be "Binging?" In addition to bing.com, yahoo.com, and msn.com, Bing powers Web search on Apple’s Siri, Kindle Fire, Amazon Fire Phone, Xbox, and many others. This also explains how Bing has quietly reached 31 percent search market share on desktop in the US., according to comScore.
Bing Ads sees a fair share of advertisers getting the most out of their paid search dollars. One of the benefits of being such a massive search engine is that Bing becomes simultaneously a data powerhouse – all those advertisers leave a trail of habits that can be analyzed.


Today we’re looking at the sins that are consistently committed by advertisers on the Bing Ads platform. Are you committing them? The sins are:

1. Assuming You Can Get Bing Searchers on Google

For example in retail alone, there are 40 million searchers found on Yahoo and Bing, but not found on Google. Turns out, not everyone uses Google. You’re missing out if you’re not going after the Bing audience, because exclusive searchers are not limited to retail, it’s across verticals. In the chart below, the orange parts show the Bing audience who doesn’t use Google and can’t be reached there.
When you assume that the Bing audience can be caught on Google, you neglect to allocate an appropriate budget for your Bing Ads campaigns.

2. Not Changing Your UTM Tags From Google to Bing

If you don’t, your metrics are going to be inaccurate and will not reflect the truth of your Bing traffic. Until June of last year, changing the UTM tag upon importing your Google campaigns was a pain in the PPC – but now Bing has auto-tagging. Not only does this save you time, it keeps your metrics accurate. Slam dunk.

3. Thinking the Targeting Options on Bing Are the Same as Google

  • Time zones for Bing Ads are different than AdWords. On Bing Ads, the time is set to the time of the user, not the business. So targeting an ad at 7 a.m., means 7 a.m. everywhere. And you can set different time zones for each campaign when you create them.
  • You have more flexibility with targeting on Bing Ads because the setting is on ad group level, not campaign level, like Google. This also gives you more options for testing.
    • Incrementally bid up or down by demographics
    • On the ad group level, you can start/stop ads differently
    • Adjust bids by geography
When you import to Bing Ads from Google, check the targeting right off because you can suddenly be more sophisticated with your ad scheduling.

Real Marketing In SEO: Building Links For Your Audience

Columnist Andrew Dennis reminds us that when you focus on your audience, the links you get will be valuable, regardless of SEO.

You should build links with an audience-first mindset.
In other words, every single link you build should be intended for your audience. If you ever find yourself obtaining links you wouldn’t want your audience to find, you’re likely being manipulative — or, at the very, least building worthless links.
Sometimes, link builders focus too much on how Google values links. I’m not suggesting you forget Google when you build links — everyone is well aware of the power links have in Google’s algorithm — but rather that you pursue links with an audience-centric focus.
There are several tangible benefits to approaching link acquisition with an audience-first mindset:

  1. Focusing on your audience creates additional marketing value.
  2. An audience-first mentality guides link prospecting.
  3. Centering your link strategy around your audience leads to better links.
When you focus on acquiring links for your audience, you’re doing real link building, and real marketing.

Focusing On Your Audience Creates Additional Marketing Value

Implementing an audience-focused mentality into your link strategy will create additional marketing value outside of SEO.
When you build links just for the sake of links, you often only want to get the link and be done. All you care about is link equity, and this often leads to pursuing less relevant and authoritative sites where your audience isn’t truly active. You’re just acquiring another link to help boost your Google rankings and then moving on to the next link.
Conversely, when you focus on your audience and create links they’ll actually encounter, it’s much more akin to real marketing. If other marketing opportunities present themselves, you’ll actually want to follow up, because it represents a real chance to engage with your audience.


Using Competitive Links To Inform Your SEO Strategy

To beat your competitors, you must first understand their methods. Columnist Casie Gillette discusses the value of competitive link data.

When I was growing up, my parents bought me every Nancy Drew book that existed. I loved the mysteries, the characters, and of course the fact that Nancy was an independent woman — something that I aspired to be. Of course, I also loved Scooby Doo, so I think it was more the mystery part… but, I digress.
Why am I telling you about my childhood reading and viewing habits? Because it might help explain why creating an SEO competitive analysis is one of my favorite things to do. The simple fact is, I love solving a mystery! And, as an SEO, one of the toughest mysteries you can solve is, “Why are they outperforming me?”
Copying your competitors is not the way to grow a business — but learning the whys and whats of your competitors’ marketing strategies can help you better understand the industry and the audience, and maybe even save you time and money.
For agencies, a competitive analysis, focused specifically on links, offers a quick way to get a complete view of your client’s competitors and can help inform your SEO strategy on a singular and broad level. Let’s take a look at how!

Start Gathering Link Data

I’d be remiss if I didn't start by discussing data collection. Back in the day, you could simply perform a site: search and get a full list of links pointing to your competitors’ sites. Unfortunately, that’s no longer the case, and tools have become a necessity.
Whether you use a backlink tool like Open Site Explorer,SEMRush, Majestic, Ahrefs, or any other link-specific tool out there, the goal is to collect as much backlink data as you can for each competitor to give yourself the fullest picture.


Yahoo Has Their Own Knowledge Graph, Not Without Their Own Embarrassing Issues

Yahoo has their own knowledge graph box at the top of the search results, but some of the results make you wonder if they need to rethink their algorithms.

A year ago, we covered how Yahoo started testing a knowledge graph box in their search results. Well, now, for many knowledge graph oriented searches, Yahoo is indeed displaying the knowledge graph box.
The Knowledge Graph is a system that Google launched in May 2012 that understands facts about people, places and things and how these entities are all connected. Bing has their own version and now, so does Yahoo.
It is interesting to me that Yahoo, which is currently powered by Bing, does not utilize Bing’s knowledge graph data for their own. For example a search for [apple] on both Yahoo and Bing show different imagery, different snippets of information blocks but yes, both pull the description or bio from Wikipedia.

Flickr Testing Improved Search Experience [PHOTOS]

Beta adds several new advanced search options, retains Creative Commons search tool.

Some Flickr users should be seeing a new search interface that’s described on the site as a “beta” and offers faster access to more content across Flickr.
Yahoo’s communications team declined to say how many users are opted in, but did give us this statement confirming the test:
We’re constantly iterating and experimenting to bring the best search experience to our users. We have nothing to announce at this time.
Images are the best way to show how it looks and what it does. First, here’s a look at the standard search results for “sunsets.”
The search filters are lined up across the top of a random assortment of images, and clicking “Advanced Search” in the upper right leads to a separate page that doesn't show any images.


Reports: EU To File Formal Antitrust Charges Against Google This Week

Company could face billions in fines if Commission decides to impose them.

Google’s years-long quest to settle and avoid antitrust charges in Europe has apparently failed. Multiple news outlets are reporting that the company will face formal charges perhaps as early as this week.
This doesn't come as a major surprise. Based on recent news and leaks the decision was anticipated.
The decision to press forward rather than settle echoes Europe’s efforts against Microsoft more than ten years ago. A formal EU announcement will likely come later this week or by early next week. At stake for Google are billions in potential fines and whatever damage the charges and proceedings might do to its reputation and market cap.
In many ways the decision to file formal charges indicates that EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager and colleagues have made up their minds that Google has violated antitrust laws in Europe. This is in most respects a “legal conclusion” rather than the opening salvo in a US-style adversarial judicial proceeding whose outcome is uncertain.
Google was several times on the cusp of settlement with Vestager’s predecessor, Joaquín Almunia. However he was unable to persuade critics and Google opponents to accept various “rival links” settlement proposals.
Formal charges do not preclude settlement. However any such move would probably have to be very different (and bolder) than the previously floated “rival links.” I speculated that a possible settlement might require the end of “universal search” in Europe.
Ultimately Google has a right of appeal of any European Commission decision to a European court in Luxembourg. However the outlook for such appeals is not favorable from what I understand. We’ll update the story as more information comes out.



Apple Watch set to beat iPhone launch with 1 million-order weekend

An estimated 957,000 American shoppers ordered Apple Watches on Friday — a sign the tech giant’s newest gadget is already seeing more initial success than its first iPhone or the iPod.
That estimate comes from Slice Intelligence, which measures digital commerce by tracking consumer e-receipts. Its data from 9,080 online shoppers showed an average of 1.3 watches bought per customer, with $503.83 spent per item. Of course, no one buys a watch and a half, so it’s likely some buyers went for more than one.
Putting those figures together, that means Apple could have shifted 1.24 million watches on its first day of preorders on Friday. How does that stack up in Apple history? Back in 2007, it took the company 74 days to sell its one millionth iPhone, and it took two years to get to that milestone with the iPod.
But of course, that was then, and the bar is set higher these days for Apple AAPL, +0.08% which trades at a post seven-for-one-split of $127.10 a share. Piper Jaffray’s Gene Munster said they expect opening-weekend sales of 1 million units, and then “modest” sales of 2.3 million units for the current quarter. 
Many buyers of the Apple Watch got frustrated on Friday as delivery dates quickly got pushed back beyond the originally promised April 24. Munster said initial supply was pretty much sold out in the first 10 to 30 minutes, depending on the model. Friday was the first day people were able to set up appointments to see the watch in person, and Munster sees demand ramping up as more people see the device.


Using the Retina MacBook as a Windows PC

Taking the MacBook to Boot Camp gets you more GPU, less battery, a few quirks.

Most people who buy Macs are doing it to run OS X, but you’d be surprised by the number of comments and e-mails we get in response to Mac reviews asking about how Windows runs on the hardware. Since Apple made the Intel switch and introduced its Boot Camp software in 2006, there’s been a small but significant group of people who have chosen to use Apple’s hardware to run Microsoft’s software, either as a secondary or primary operating system.
Because the new MacBook is an entirely new product rather than a straightforward refresh, we spent some time installing Windows and taking it for a spin. If you’ve used Boot Camp before, there aren’t many surprises. But there are still things you need to know if you intend to buy a MacBook to run Windows.

Installation and display differences

The actual process of creating a Boot Camp install drive and downloading your Windows drivers hasn’t changed at all. Get a Windows 8.1 ISO on your MacBook somehow, launch the Boot Camp Assistant app from the Utilities folder, hook up a USB drive that’s 8GB or greater in capacity, decide how much space you want to dedicate to the Windows partition, and let it do its thing.
The one difference, of course, is the whole port thing. USB Type-C flash drives are still unicorns, so at a bare minimum you’ll want Apple’s $19 USB Type-C to Type-A adapter or a generic equivalent. Make sure your laptop is fully charged before you begin the whole process, but, using a USB 3.0 flash drive, we had no trouble creating a Boot Camp install disk, rebooting and installing Windows, and installing the Boot Camp support software and drivers with battery life to spare.

Monday 13 April 2015

‘New’ Windows SMB Vulnerability Affects All Software Versions But Microsoft Probably Won’t Patch It


A serious Windows vulnerability affecting all versions – including the Windows 10 preview – was recently discovered by a team of security researchers at Carnegie Mellon’s CERT Division. The issue, dubbed “Redirect to SMB” is what is known as a “zombie” vulnerability in that it is a newer version of an old bug discovered nearly 20 years ago. The Windows bug can allow an attacker to steal credentials such as usernames and passwords for numerous services inside Windows, as well as software form some 31 different companies – most notably, Adobe, Apple and Oracle. The bug has to do with how Windows and other software handle HTTP requests, and can affect some very popular programs such as iTunes and Adobe Flash.
The bug was disclosed on Monday by Cylance researchers who were sure to note it was an updated version of research by Aaron Spangler in 1997.
“Redirect to SMB is a way for attackers to steal valuable user credentials by hijacking communications with legitimate web servers via man-in-the-middle attacks, then sending them to malicious SMB (server message block) servers that force them to spit out the victim’s username, domain and hashed password,” wrote Brain Wallace of Cylance in a blog post Monday.

5 Ways to Use Your Competitors to Gain SEO Momentum

SEO seems like a solitary endeavor to many people. After all, most companies have one person or one small team dedicated to producing content, making onsite tweaks, and building external links, but the reality is that SEO actually relies on a vast network of relationships for success. Think about it; you rely on high-authority external publications to link to your website in order to pass authority. You rely on your social media followers to engage with your brand online and make your presence seem more valuable. You rely on your site visitors to stay on your pages for longer than a few seconds, and not click "back," resulting in a bounce.
There’s a fundamental piece of this network that most businesses often neglect: your competitors.
SEO is a competitive world. Your competitors are the reason you have to work so hard to build search engine visibility — if they rank even one position higher than you, they’ll likely get a greater share of traffic (assuming you’re both on the first page). It seems crazy to think that you can use your competitors, and sometimes actively work with them to lead your SEO campaign to success, but this is the reality.
Following are just a few of the strategies you can use to gain SEO momentum from your biggest competitors:

1. Link Profile Mirroring

One of the easiest ways to take advantage of your competitors is to learn how they’re building inbound links. These days, link-building is a tricky business — Google is sharper than ever, and its search algorithm is constantly scouting for businesses trying to use deceptive or unnatural links to manipulate their rankings. Finding high-quality sources in your niche can be a daunting task — which is why seeing what your high-ranking competitors are doing that has resulted in their high rankings.
There are plenty of free tools you can use to research the link profile of your competitors. With these you’ll be able to see where your competitors are building links and what type of links they’re building. It’s not a good idea to copy your competitors’ link-building strategies directly, but you can use them as inspiration and borrow some of the same sources for your own efforts. For example, if they are guest blogging for a particular publisher, try reaching out to that publisher to establish a relationship of your own.

2. Content Insights

Similarly, you can look at your competitors’ content strategies and gain new insights about your audience and new avenues for your own content. On a weekly or monthly basis, review the types of posts you see on your competitors’ websites. What topics are they choosing? How well are people reacting to them? Are they attracting lots of comments and shares?
Use these questions to guide you in your own content marketing strategy. For example, if you see a post on summer project ideas on your competitor’s site getting hundreds of shares, considering writing an alternative – and better — version of your own. The key here is not to duplicate what’s working well, but to gain broad insights about your audience and customize your strategy to appeal to that audience. With better topics and more direct writing, you’ll be able to rank higher for more relevant keywords.

3. Local Industry Articles

One of the best ways to gain rankings quickly for long-tail keywords is to write about your industry in your geographic location. With this strategy, you’ll have two major limiting factors — your niche and your region — which will give you a perfect competitive opportunity to rank high in Google. The key is to write objective, truly useful articles about the competitive landscape. For example, you could write a piece titled "The Most Trustworthy Law Firms in Dallas," writing briefly about your own law firm and some of your closest competitors. You might fear giving your competitors the additional exposure, but if your article is well-written, your site and your brand are what are going to come up in the search results.

4. Social Following Mirroring

Much in the same way that you can mirror a backlink profile, you can mirror a social following. Take a look at the demographics that follow your competitors’ Facebook and Twitter profiles, and reach out to them on an individual level. On Twitter this is quite simple; head to your competitor’s follower list and start following some of their followers. Since they’re already predisposed to following companies like yours, they’ll be likely to follow you back, giving you greater visibility and a greater audience on your social platforms. Alternatively, you can take a look at the types of people who follow your competitors and gain insights about your key audiences.

5. Regular Engagement

Finally, don’t be afraid to engage with your competitors directly, especially in a social context. Comment on their blog posts. Share and retweet some of their posts. Make jokes with them. They’ll appreciate the extra visibility, and they’ll likely respond in kind. This is only going to lead to greater exposure for both your brands and greater relevance in search engines’ eyes.
In the context of SEO, your competitors are critically important. They hold new information about your target audience. They allow you to build your authority in your geographic region. They give you a platform for more backlinks, more interactions, and more engagements. The end result is that you’ll have far more domain authority and greater ranks, with a better understanding of who your customers are and how to reach them. You might give your competitors a bit more exposure in the process, but the long-term benefits of these strategies far outweigh that negligible setback.


How Search Engines Process Links

Ever wondered how search engines crawl, analyze, index, and rank pages? Columnist Jenny Halasz has created a helpful primer on the link graph to answer these questions.

Have you ever wondered why 404s, rel=canonicals, noindex, nofollow, and robots.txt work the way they do? Or have you never been clear on quite how they do all work? To help you understand, here is a very basic interpretation of how search engines crawl pages and add links to the link graph.

The Simple Crawl

The search engine crawler (let’s make it a spider for fun) visits a site. The first thing it collects is the robots.txt file.
Let’s assume that file either doesn't exist or says it’s okay to crawl the whole site. The crawler collects information about all of those pages and feeds it back into a database. Strictly, it’s a crawl scheduling system that de-duplicates and shuffles pages by priority to index later.
While it’s there, it collects a list of all the pages each page links to. If they’re internal links, the crawler will probably follow them to other pages. If they’re external, they get put into a database for later.

Processing Links

Later on, when the link graph gets processed, the search engine pulls all those links out of the database and connects them, assigning relative values to them. The values may be positive, or they may be negative. Let’s imagine, for example, that one of the pages is spamming. If that page is linking to other pages, it may be passing some bad link value on to those pages. Let’s say S=Spammer, and G=Good:


Google Panda & Penguin Lack Real-Time Updates, Despite Google’s Past Statements

Google had given statements that its Panda and Penguin anti-spam fighting filters were running constantly. Now it says there's still delays between data pushes.

Google has suggested that having to wait months between for Panda and Penguin updates would be a thing of the past, since these were supposed to be happening on an ongoing basis now. But the company flip-flopped about this last week. Both still work on a periodic basis, with months elapsing between updates.

How Panda & Penguin Work

Before getting to the flip-flop, let’s do a reminder of how Panda and Penguin have traditionally worked.
Panda is a filter Google uses to identify low-quality or “thin” content that manages to rank well despite Google’s regular algorithms. To combat this, Google effectively runs the entire web through the Panda filter on periodic basis. Sites that Panda catches will no longer perform as well as before.
The filter hasn’t been run on a regular basis. It hasn’t operated in real-time, nor on a daily or weekly basis. Rather, it’s been a process that’s happened anywhere from a monthly to a quarterly basis. In other words, every month or two or three or four, Google reruns the web sites its knows about through Panda again, to see if any sites have improved, if new ones should be caught and to deal with false positives.
The filter itself also often changes, when one of these updates happens. Google sometimes makes minor tweaks to it, designed (it hopes) to improve the ability to catch what Google considers poor content. Sometimes these changes are more dramatic. When the more dramatic changes are introduced, it’s common that many more sites get impacted.
As for the Penguin, that’s a filter aimed at severe web spam, especially unnatural links. Like Panda, it runs on a periodic basis. Everything described above about Panda is the same for Penguin, other than the type of spam it targets.

The Panda & Penguin Waiting Game

Publishers hit by Panda and Penguin can change their sites all they want to improve, but it’s a wasted effort until the next Panda or Penguin updates happens. Any improvements, if they are the right ones, won’t register with Google’s search results until they are cycled again through Panda or Penguin and new information is “pushed” into Google’s overall ranking algorithm.
For example, let’s say there’s a Panda Update that happens in the month of February, which hits a publisher’s site. The next day, the publisher scrambles to drop content they think is to blame and make other changes. Even if they’ve made all the right moves, they’ll remain penalized by Panda. They won’t have a chance to escape until Panda is run again. Say that happens in April. This means the site has a two month wait until the changes it made will benefit it.

Google Japan Ordered To Remove Negative Reviews Based On Thin Evidence

Ruling appears to be based largely on affidavit signed by the doctor in question.

Late last week a Japanese court ordered Google to remove two reviews from Google Maps that were critical of a local medical clinic. An unnamed doctor who operated or worked at the clinic and allegedly treated the reviewer-patients signed an affidavit swearing that the reviews were false (and allegedly defamatory).
According to TechCrunch, which first reported the decision, the clinic sued the individuals for defamation. The Japanese District Court is now requiring Google to not only remove the reviews from Google Japan but also from its global results. (As with the Right to Be Forgotten in Europe, this is another example of a local jurisdiction trying to exercise control over Google’s global index.)
The company faces a modest potential fine of roughly ($2,500) if it fails to do so. The fine is obviously not the issue. The larger question and concern is the potential precedent this might set both in Japan and potentially other countries without strong free speech laws. In many countries privacy, religious orthodoxy, “sedition” and other types of values often trump speech.
According to the TechCrunch article, “neither review violates the policies that Google has in place for user generated content within the Maps service.” Google has said it may appeal. 
Little has been reported about the underlying facts or evidence presented in the case. If the case involved the clear presentation of evidence that the reviews were fabricated and defamatory then the removals are not anything to necessarily worry about.
It appears, however, that the doctor-plaintiff simply issued a formal denial and that was enough to support the court’s decision. If that is indeed the case then this decision has potentially broad and very negative implications. Any disgruntled professional or business owner in Japan, confronted with critical reviews, could potentially invoke the decision and follow a similar procedure to get the reviews removed.
Business-friendly courts and the threat of litigation could then be used to broadly intimidate those who might be inclined to write critical reviews of services they receive.


Bing Revamps Mobile Home Page Adding Swipe Up For Popular Topics & Settings

Bing deploys a "significant redesign" to their mobile homepage.

Bing announced that they’ve completely redesigned their home page for mobile users on iPhone and Android devices. Bing calls this a “significant redesign” of their mobile home page.
Besides for quick searching capability, the interface is now swipable up and down, as you swipe, you unlock the ability to see the home page image details, the “popular now” topics and access to your Bing accounts, rewards summary and much more.

Here is an animated GIF of the new home page:


Microsoft’s new Windows 10 build for phones features Spartan browser

As promised a week ago, Microsoft has started rolling out the second build (10051) of the Windows 10 technical preview for phones. It is being rolled out to Windows Insider users and as expected comes with an early version of the Spartan browser for phones.
It now supports almost all Lumia phones. Take a look at the list of the phones supported here. However, it doesn’t support the Lumia Icon, 930 and even the 640XL due to scaling problem. Microsoft has explained in its blogpost, “You’ll see that the list has remained largely unchanged with one exception – the Lumia Icon. Unfortunately there is an issue with scaling on certain devices (930, Icon, and 640XL) which makes the UI too small to be usable, and we need to add code to support new scaling thresholds for these devices.”
However, it still doesn’t support Microsoft phones that are built by OEMs. It also brings hordes of new features like the early version of Project Spartan that uses the new rendering engine and promises to give greater interoperability with the modern mobile web. It also includes early versions of Reading View and Reading List. It is not the default browser, for now, and exists side-by-side with IE11.

Chinese hackers target Southeast Asia, India, researchers say

REUTERS - Hackers, most likely from China, have been spying on governments and businesses in Southeast Asia and India uninterrupted for a decade, researchers at internet security company FireEye Inc said.
In a report released on Monday, FireEye said the cyber espionage operations dated back to at least 2005 and "focused on targets - government and commercial - who hold key political, economic and military information about the region."
"Such a sustained, planned development effort coupled with the (hacking) group's regional targets and mission, lead us to believe that this activity is state-sponsored - most likely the Chinese government," the report's authors said.
Bryce Boland, Chief Technology Officer for Asia Pacific at FireEye and co-author of the report, said the attack was still ongoing, noting that the servers the attackers used were still operational, and that FireEye continued to see attacks against its customers, who number among the targets.
Reuters couldn't independently confirm any of the assertions made in the report.

China has always denied accusations that it uses the Internet to spy on governments, organisations and companies.

Sunday 12 April 2015

Amazon to begin testing new delivery drones in the US

Last month it emerged that the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had granted Amazon permission to begin testing a delivery drone prototype for its Prime Air service, a venture that aims to transport packages to Amazon customers in under 30 minutes. But there was a hitch, with the company since revealing the vehicle cleared for use had already become obsolete. Things are now back on track with the FAA giving Amazon the green light to put its current models to the test.
Amazon first took steps to win the blessing of the authorities in July last year, when it petitioned the FAA for permission to begin testing its drones. But the agency's response was hardly swift, finally granting an "experimental airworthiness certificate" to Amazon in March 2015. The slow progress partnered with the now-evident worthlessness of the permit prompted Amazon to carry out testing of its more sophisticated models abroad, namely at a secret Canadian site only 2,000 ft (610 m) from the US border.
By way of a letter to Paul Misener, Amazon's vice president of Global Public Policy, on Wednesday April 8, the FAA has granted the company's request for exemption. This will clear the way for Amazon to begin testing its drones outdoors in the United States.
The exemption dictates that Amazon's drones fly no higher than 400 ft (122 m), no faster than 100 mph (161 km/h) and remain within the pilot's line of sight, among a raft of other conditions relating to safety and maintenance. These rules are consistent with a set of proposed guidelines around commercial drone flight that the FAA floated earlier in the year.
While it marks another step toward the realization of Amazon's ambitious drone delivery plan, there's still a long way to go before quadcopters are dropping parcels in your front yard.


Microsoft Lumia Denim latest rollout news: Available on more smartphones in Europe, US and India

Microsoft's latest software update, Lumia Denim, is now available for more smartphones across major countries of the world.
So to you track whether Denim is available on you phone in you country, we have compiled this tracker showing the status of Lumia Denim in European countries, along with the US and India.
In Europe
  • United Kingdom: Lumia 520 (country variant, EE, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 530 (country variant, O2, Tesco Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 535 (country variant, O2), Lumia 620 (country variant, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 625 (country variant, EE, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 630 (country variant, EE,O2, Vodafone, Tesco Mobile), Lumia 635 (country variant, 3UK, EE, O2, Tesco Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 720 (country variant, O2), Lumia 735 (country variant, EE, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 820 (country variant, EE, O2, Vodafone) Lumia 830 (country variant, EE, Vodafone), Lumia 920 ( country variant, EE, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 925 (country variant, EE,O2, Vodafone), Lumia 930 (country variant, Vodafone, EE, O2), Lumia 1020 (country variant, EE, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 1320 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (country variant, O2, Vodafone).
  • Netherlands: Lumia 520 (country variant, Vodafone, T-Mobile), Lumia 530 (T-Mobile), Lumia 535 single-SIM (T-Mobile), Lumia 620 (country variant), Lumia 625 (country variant, T-Mobile), Lumia 630 (T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 635 (country variant), Lumia 720 (country variant) ,Lumia 735 (country variant), Lumia 820 (country variant, KPN, T-Mobile, Vodafone) Lumia 830 (country variant, Vodafone, T-Mobile), Lumia 920 (country variant, KPN, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 925 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 930 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 1020 (T-Mobile), Lumia 1320 (country variant).
  • Germany: Lumia 520 (country variant, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 530 (T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 535 (country variant), Lumia 620 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 625 (country variant, O2, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 630 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 630 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 635 (country variant, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 720 (country variant, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 735 (Vodafone), Lumia 820 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone) Lumia 830 (country variant, O2, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 920 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 925 (country variant, Vodafone, O2), Lumia 930 (country variant, T-Mobile, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 1020 (country variant, O2, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 1320 (country variant, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 1520 (country variant, Vodafone).
  • Greece: Lumia 520 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 530 (Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 535 (country variant), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 620 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 625 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 630 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 635 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 720 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 735 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 820 (Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 830 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 920 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 925 (Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 930 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 1020 (country variant, Cosmote, Vodafone), Lumia 1320 (country variant, T-Mobile), Lumia 1520 (country variant).
  • Hungary: Lumia 520 (country variant, Telenor, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 530 (T-Mobile, Telenor, Vodafone), Lumia 530 dual SIM (T-Mobile), Lumia 535 (country variant, Telenor), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 620 (country variant, Telenor, T-Mobile), Lumia 625 (country variant, T-Mobile, Telenor, Vodafone), Lumia 630 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 635 (country variant, T-Mobile, Telenor), Lumia 720 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 735 (country variant, T-Mobile, Telenor, Vodafone), Lumia 820 (T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 830 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 920 (Telenor, T-Mobile), Lumia 925 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 930 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 1020 (country variant, T-Mobile, Vodafone), Lumia 1320 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (country variant).
  • Ireland: Lumia 520 (Meteor, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 530 (Vodafone), Lumia 620 (country variant, Meteor, O2, Vodafone), Lumia 625 (country variant, Meteor, Vodafone), Lumia 635 (Vodafone, Meteor, O2), Lumia 820 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 830 (Vodafone), Lumia 920 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 925 (Meteor,Vodafone) Lumia 930 (Vodafone, O2, Meteor), Lumia 1020 (Vodafone), Lumia 1320 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (Vodafone, country variant).
  • Poland: Lumia 520 (country variant, Orange, Play T-Mobile), Lumia 530 (Play, Orange), Lumia 530 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 535 (Play,Polkomtel), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 620 (country variant, Play), Lumia 625 (country variant, Orange, Play,T-Mobile), Lumia 630 (country variant, Play, Polkomtel),Lumia 630 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 635 (Orange, Play, Polkomtel, T-Mobile), Lumia 720 (country variant, Play, Orange), Lumia 730 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 735 (Orange, Play,Polkomtel, T-Mobile), Lumia 820 (country variant, Orange, Play, T-Mobile), Lumia 830 (country variant, T-Mobile), Lumia 920 (country variant, Orange), Lumia 925 (country variant, Orange, Play), Lumia 930 (country variant, Orange, Play, Polkomtel, T-Mobile), Lumia 1020 (country variant, T-Mobile), Lumia 1320 (country variant, Orange, Play, T-Mobile), Lumia 1520 (country variant).
  • Russia: Lumia 520 (country variant, MTS), Lumia 535 (country variant), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 630 (country variant), Lumia 635 (country variant), Lumia 730 (country variant), Lumia 930 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (country variant).
  • Spain: Lumia 520 (country variant, Jazztel, Movistar, Vodafone, Yoigo), Lumia 535 (country variant), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 620 (Movistar, Vodafone), Lumia 625 (country variant, Movistar, Vodafone), Lumia 635 (country variant, Movistar, Orange, Vodafone), Lumia 720 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 735 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 830 (country variant, Vodafone), Lumia 920 (country variant, Vodafone, Lumia 925 (country variant, Movistar, Vodafone), Lumia 1020 (country variant, Movistar, Vodafone), Lumia 1320 (country variant, Jazztel, Orange, Vodafone).
  • Switzerland: Lumia 520 (country variant, Orange, Sunrise, Swisscom), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 620 (country variant), Lumia 625 (Swisscom), Lumia 630 (Orange, Swisscom), Lumia 635 (country variant, Orange, Sunrise, Swisscom), Lumia 720 (Swisscom), Lumia 735 (Swisscom), Lumia 820 (country variant, Orange, Swisscom), Lumia 830 (country variant, Swisscom), Lumia 920 (country variant, Swisscom), Lumia 930 (country variant, Swisscom), Lumia 1020 (country variant, Swisscom), Lumia 1320 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (country variant, Swisscom) .
  • In India: Lumia 435 Dual-SIM (country variant), Lumia 520 (country variant), Lumia 525 (country variant), Lumia 530 (country variant), Lumia 530 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 532 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 535 dual SIM (country variant), Lumia 620 (country variant), Lumia 625 (country variant), Lumia 630 (country variant), Lumia 630 dual-SIM (country variant), Lumia 720 (country variant), Lumia 730 dual-SIM (country variant), Lumia 820 (country variant), Lumia 830 (country variant), Lumia 920 (country variant), Lumia 925 (country variant), Lumia 930 (country variant), Lumia 1020 (country variant), Lumia 1320 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (country variant).
  • In US: Lumia 635 (Sprint), Lumia 822 (Verizon), Lumia 925 (T-Mobile, Verizon), Lumia 928 (Verizon), Lumia Icon (Verizon), Lumia 1020 (country variant), Lumia 1520 (AT&T).
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