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Archive for the ‘Development’ Category

She did it her way

by henrycopeland
Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Former Wonkette Ana Marie Cox is asking readers to subscribe to her private twitter feed at $100 a pop. TPM editor Andrew Golis is bemused.

We shall overcome some day

by henrycopeland
Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Because this election is about hope beating fear, because this election is about competence beating incompetence, investing outperforming gambling, rationality triumphing over impulse, ideas mastering emotions, action outwitting reaction, tomorrow l’ll be humming one song. I hope you’ll join me.

We’re not arriving in the promised land. There are no utopias. There are mountain-high challenges ahead. But if Obama wins tomorrow, it is a good thing. And even if Obama were to lose tomorrow, enough torches have been lit to set the America’s ideals aflame for the next generation. We can do better and we will do better. Deep in my heart I do believe. We shall overcome some day.

Soul of iron

by henrycopeland
Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Sophie completed her first marathon on Sunday.

Wow! The course’s second half was hillish and hellish.

I hope to run one someday (New York?!) with her.

Chicken or egg: commodity prices and the recession

by henrycopeland
Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Bloomberg sums up the argument that collapsing commodity prices forecast a recession. This view assumes that most commodity prices aren’t speculative and reflect fundamental supply and demand. (I’d always tended to view commodity prices as largely driven by psychology, which would mean that talk of a recession is what drives commodity prices lower.)

Google poops on PayperPost?

by henrycopeland
Monday, November 3rd, 2008

About a year ago, TechCrunch reported that it Google was finally cracking down on Payperpost, the service built to enable advertisers to pay bloggers to post about their products and services. Many Payperpost advertisers buy links just to drive up their own prominence in Google, since Google ranks a site according to how many sites link in to that site.

The Google move was first reported in a post on PayperPost’s blog, and was then linked by TechCrunch. One year later, it appears that Payperpost has taken the post down (redirecting the link http://community.izea.com/blog/2007/11/google-goes-aft.html to the general corporate blog), but TechCrunch’s “snapshot” tool still had a copy of the post. Here are the salient pieces:

Last night Google decided to go after some of the bloggers in our network, reducing their PR from whatever they previously had to zero. Once again Google has proved that PR has little to do with blog traffic, influence or relevance and everything to defending their monopolistic stranglehold on search and online advertising.

It is no coincidence that Google has gone after some blogs that utilize PayPerPost and many of our competitors services. We offer a very attractive alternative to AdSense and are leading a charge to provide real monetization for everyday bloggers. Unlike the Google AdSense black box, we are palms up when it comes to revenue share and give bloggers the lions share of advertising dollars that they deserve.

I find it laughable that high profile bloggers like TechCrunch aren’t being penalized in the same way. Perhaps it’s the fact that they use AdSense. Perhaps it’s the fact that they are silicon valley insiders and are invited to special Google events. Either way I don’t see the difference between a sponsored post in our system or this sponsored post. Both are paid for, neither use no-follow.

What does this mean for Bloggers?
If you have been hit by Google unfortunately there is little we can do. We know that Google PR does not reflect your actual traffic and it is sad that Google chooses to over look that to protect their own bottom line. We now know from some of our friends inside of Google (thanks “bob”) that they are now looking for phrases such as PPP, PayPerPost, ReviewMe, Payu2blog, etc. in the text of your post. For that reason I would suggest refraining from using any type of this text in the body of your posts, sponsored or not. When you disclose thank the sponsor, not PPP.

This is Censorship.
One of our programmers actually had his blog de-ranked last night because he mentions PPP often as an employee. He has never taken a sponsored post, nor does he sell sponsored links. He is simply blogging about his day to day experience here. I find this outrageous. I encourage you to write to Google and your Congressmen.

Write your Congressmen? What ever happened to this brouhaha?

James Surowiecki blogs

by henrycopeland
Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

I start each week’s New Yorker with James Surowiecki’s columns. So I’m thrilled (and a little daunted) to discover that he’s now posting multiple entries a day on his New Yorker blog.

Here’s a great post about the mediocre Nikkei. I’m so glad that didn’t end up on the cutting room floor in some editor’s office.

But beyond getting to read more of Surowiecki’s rational masterpieces, the blog is disquieting, revealing that in addition to writing brilliantly Surowiecki is also confused, and probably owns more stock than he’d like to admit. (To himself or to his wife?) There’s a recurring barely suppressed cry of “Fix it!”

CBS ad decline

by henrycopeland
Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

Bloomberg reports:

Ad sales are falling at CBS’s radio and TV stations as the U.S. economy shrinks. At the TV unit, which accounts for almost two-thirds of revenue, advertising dropped 14 percent. CBS said NBC’s broadcast of the Beijing Olympics took viewers during the period and coverage of the presidential conventions limited ad opportunities, along with the overall slump in the market.

Consumer despair

by henrycopeland
Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

What used to be called the “consumer confidence” survey may be due for a renaming. The FT reports:

Consumer confidence fell from a reading of 61.4 in September to 38 [in October] – the lowest level since the index was established more than 40 years ago and well below economists’ expectations that it would drop to 52. … The previous all-time low in the index was set in December 1974, when consumer confidence fell to a level of 43.2. … Americans’ assessments of their “present situation” declined from 61.1 in September to 41.9 in October. Meanwhile, the “expectations” index collapsed from 61.5 in September to 35.5 this month.

Credit crunch hits the till

by henrycopeland
Friday, October 31st, 2008

A great article in today’s WSJ about about accounts receivable. A few months out, this is going to be what puts players like NYT, with huge AR and only a little money in the bank, out of business. NYT has roughly $700 million in billings a quarter; if its AR extends out even 15 days further, its $45 million in the bank is gone.

Flashback

by henrycopeland
Friday, October 31st, 2008

Thanks to the fantastic Electoral-Vote.com, here’s what the predictions looked like exactly four years ago..

Check here to see what the polls look like in today’s race.

Thanks for the fantastic site, Votemaster! It’s a pleasure and an honor doing business with you through three election cycles.


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