Friday, December 5, 2008

Social Media This Week: December 5, 2008


Friend Portability


The news: On Thursday, Google and Facebook separately announced their own data portability programs called Google Friends Connect and Facebook Connect. The ability to move a group of friends from one social network to another is something many users have been seeking for quite some time. Both Google and Facebook users will be able to use their identities from these sites on others that support one of the programs. The sites that will support these programs will allow their visitors to log in and use the already available information in their profiles as well as find friends already on the sites that they currently visit. The programs are intended to minimize the number of usernames and passwords that users currently use. Using the Google Friends Connect feature, for example, on a companionable site, visitors will be able to go into the site using both their AOL or Yahoo username and password.


Key question: Does friend portability lower the barrier to entry for someone to build a new and better social network?

Santa 2.0


The news:
For many years, Canadian children have been sending letters to Santa in the hopes of getting exactly what they want for Christmas. Sympatico MSN has introduced Santa to the beauty of e-mail and personalized web video to help reach out to children using a site called the Portable North Pole. You simply type in a child’s name, age, location, and a few other things and that child will receive a personalized message from Santa in the North Pole. The video is available in English and French.


Key question: With letters to Santa going digital will there be anyone, anywhere sending handwritten letters anywhere?


Canadian Tweetsters and Politics

The news:
Politics in Ottawa have sent Tweetsters (Twitter users) aflutter this past week. Twitter is a microblogging tool that has exploded in the past couple of months in much the same what that Facebook exploded early last year. For many hours on Thursday, “coalition” was the most common phrase on Twitter (right after “Christmas”) causing hundreds of confused Americans to wonder what the heck is going on in Canada. Click here to see what Tweetsters are saying about the coalition.


Key question: There’s lots of Canadian politics still to come. What role will Twitter play in the new year?

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