Thursday, April 8, 2010

Social Networking Habits Vary Considerably Across Asia-Pacific Markets


 comScore, Inc. released its latest report on social networking activity in the Asia-Pacific region (excluding China) based on data from its World Metrix service. The study found that 50.8 percent of the total online population in the Asia-Pacific region visited a social networking site in February 2010, reaching a total of 240.3 million visitors. Facebook.com ranked as the top social network across the majority of individual markets in the region, while competing brands commanded the top position in certain markets, including Orkut in India, Mixi.jp in Japan, CyWorld in South Korea and Wretch.cc in Taiwan.
“While social networking continues to be one of the most popular and fastest growing Web activities in the world, its dynamics in the Asia-Pacific region exhibit significantly more individual market differentiation than in other global regions,” said Will Hodgman, comScore executive vice president for Asia Pacific. “In some markets, such as the Philippines, Australia and Indonesia, social networking is one of the most popular Web activities reaching nearly 90 percent of the entire Internet population, while other markets report less PC-based social networking penetration, which can often be attributed to the high propensity to engage in social networking via mobile devices in these markets.”
In February 2010, Internet users in the Asia-Pacific region averaged 2.5 hours on social networking sites during the month and visited the category an average of 15 times. Across markets, the Philippines showed the highest penetration of social networking usage with more than 90 percent of its entire Web population visiting a social networking site during the month, followed by Australia (89.6 percent penetration) and Indonesia (88.6 percent penetration).
Social networkers in the Philippines also showed the highest level of engagement on social networking sites averaging 5.5 hours per visitor in February, with visitors frequenting the social networking category an average of 26 times during the month. Strong engagement was also exhibited by Internet users in Indonesia (5.4 hours per visitor and 22 visits per visitor), Australia (3.8 hours per visitor and 20 visits per visitor) and Malaysia (nearly 3.8 hours per visitor and 22 visits per visitor).
Social Networking Reach and Engagement in Asia Pacific Markets
February 2010
Total Internet Audience*, Age 15+ - Home & Work Locations
Source: comScore World Metrix
Social Networking
% ReachAverage Minutes per VisitorAverage Visits per Visitor
Asia Pacific50.8148.915.1
Philippines90.3332.226.3
Australia89.6228.020.9
Indonesia88.6324.422.6
Malaysia84.7226.022.3
Singapore83.7220.922.1
New Zealand81.2217.520.3
Taiwan75.9131.318.3
Hong Kong75.4223.325.4
India68.5130.113.0
South Korea63.5131.416.0
Vietnam46.149.57.2
Japan42.3120.514.0
*Excludes visitation from public computers such as Internet cafes or access from mobile phones or PDAs.
An analysis of top social networks in each of the Asia-Pacific markets included in this report revealed various brand preferences across markets. Facebook.com was the social networking leader in eight of the markets – Philippines, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Vietnam – while in other countries competing brands captured the top position. Local players led in Japan (Mixi.jp) and South Korea (CyWorld), while Google-owned Orkut ranked as the top social networking site in India and Yahoo!’s Wretch.cc led in Taiwan.

Monday, March 15, 2010

MyCuredComputer.com Combats the Ever-Changing Facebook Virus Koobface


The Koobface virus is attacking Facebook. Originally discovered in December 2008, a potent version of the virus hit Twitter and other social networks in spring and summer 2009. Updated tracking of the Koobface virus suggests that a specific strain (Net-Worm.Win32.Koobface.b) of the computer worm is becoming rampant on Facebook. My Cured Computer, an online computer repair company, is using remote repair and log-in technology to rid infected computers of the Facebook virus.
When Koobface infects a computer, the virus turns it into a useless machine. Koobface has recently started to manipulate the computer registry and trick a computer so that it does not recognize its own files. The virus will also try to collect personal data such as credit card information. Savvy Koobface controllers lure social networking users into infecting their own computers. The virus is starting to attract users with new and more sophisticated ploys. Yet the original method for tricking users still works to spread the virus.
Facebook users will receive a message from their friend’s infected computer. The message directs users to a link and then they will receive a request to download a video player. The download is an executable file that gets past most antivirus programs and infects a user’s computer. Koobface uses popular videos and messages to attract the most views such as breaking news about celebrities. The Koobface scheme does not even require hacking into a hard drive. Users download the virus and then transfer it unknowingly to their Facebook friends. The brains behind Koobface always alter the bad code and try to stay a step ahead of antivirus software.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Crisis Camp Haiti meets today to develop high tech disaster relief strategies

Today software developers from around Washington, D.C. will come together at the Sunlight Foundation in order to find the best ways to use data and create solutions for aid workers to assist the relief efforts in Haiti. These CrisisCamps, (an idea which arose out of Transparency Camp ‘09), or “Hackathons for Haiti” will also take place in Silicon Valley and London.
The event(s) will bring together specialists in database creation, visualization, geospatial data and other fields in order to build reliable tools that field workers and other volunteers will be able to use on laptops and mobile devices. Ideally some developers will also think about long-term, data-centric solutions, like tracking relief dollars and helping to make the distribution of funds a bit more accountable. (After all, if there’s been difficulty knowing where the billions in Katrina relief went, just imagine the challenge in a country with virtually no social or governmental accountability mechanism like Haiti.)
Perhaps the best part of events such as Crisis Camp is that there’s not necessarily a pre-determined idea of what is needed before folks show up. The openness of Crisis Camp allows for new, innovative ideas to emerge, bounce around, be refined and become something bigger or better before they are created – and all accomplished by volunteers who may not ever wield a hammer for Habitat for Humanity, but contribute just as much with a keystroke and code commit. Visit the Sunlight Foundation portal for complete details

Monday, December 14, 2009

gogo6 Launches gogoNET Social Network for IPv6 Professionals

gogo6 inc. launched gogoNET, the social network for IPv6 professionals, after a two month beta period. gogoNET’s purpose is to provide the knowledge necessary to help professionals answer the fundamental question: “How should I roll out IPv6 in my network?”

“We built gogoNET because we believe participating in a professional social network is the best way to acquire the knowledge necessary to implement IPv6,” said Bruce Sinclair, gogo6 CEO. “If you think about it, it’s easy to find information on IPv6 but not knowledge. Knowledge comes from formal training, past experience or the experience of others. Given most professionals were not schooled in IPv6, learning it from others is the most practical alternative. gogoNET is a collection of professionals with different IPv6 knowledge - tapping into this allows professionals to make sense of the information out there and to make the right decisions.”

"Web 2.0 is not a defined protocol by W3C, it’s just a collection of social networking apps with proprietary solutions,” said Latif Ladid, President, IPv6 Forum. “W3C is working on standardizing web 2.0 in the web 3.0 protocols. However gogoNET goes beyond web 2/3.0, it promotes the use of the end to end Internet model using IPv6 to generate the next generation web apps to open greater innovation in social networking especially for the mobile networking world in the making.” Visit the gogoNET portal and register for an account to test this new service

Web 3.0 Conference - Preview (January 26-27 in Silicon Valley)

The emergence of a new era of technologies, collectively known as Web 3.0, provides a strategically significant opportunity to make media and business run better. Also known as the semantic web or linked data, web 3.0 is a web in which data is linked to allow for more meaningful, actionable insight to be extracted. At the conference, we will explore how companies are using these technologies today, and should be using them tomorrow, for significant bottom line impact in areas like marketing, corporate information management, publishing, customer service, and personal productivity.
Speakers include:
Frank Addante, Rubicon
Brooke Aker, Expert System USA
Adam Boyden, Conduit
Scott Brinker, ion interactive
Mark Greaves, Vulcan
Tom Gruber, siri
Any many more ...
Review the complete speaker roster and agenda via the Web 3.0 portal

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