by Fabrizio Giordano - Published: July 9th, 2010 -

private_july10.jpgDespite claims that the age of privacy is over, many Internet users continue to have privacy concerns, particularly as more and more of our personal data is stored and shared online.

Having a privacy policy for your startup is important then in terms of meeting the legal requirements for protecting your customers’ personal information. But it’s also important in terms of building trust of people who use your products and services. And while, granted, not everyone is going to click on the link to read your privacy policy, that doesn’t mean you can avoid addressing this topic. And in fact, how you address privacy issues might be a way that sets your startup apart from your competitors.

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A privacy policy does not need to be a lengthy, jargon-filled legal document (although you might want legal counsel in drafting it). While Microsoft’s privacy policy clocks in at around 4000 words and Google’s contains around 1800, the search engine DuckDuckGo posted its privacy policy today: clear, concise, and 10 words. “By default, DuckDuckGo does not collect or share personal information.”

The bulk of DuckDuckGo’s privacy page addresses “why you should care” and explains the ways in which other search engines track and store your information. It’s an important distinction for DuckDuckGo as the startup positions itself as a search engine that not only delivers less spam- and ad-filled results, but that protects the privacy of its users’ searches.

The privacy policy that your startup drafts will vary depending on your business, the kinds of data you capture, and your intentions for it. But in general, here are some things your privacy policy should address:

1. What information do you collect?
2. How do you collect the information?
3. How do you use the information?
4. What control do users have over their personal data?
5. How do you protect users’ information?

DuckDuckGo founder Gabriel Weinberg contends that “too many startups copy and paste the longest one they can find because they want to cover all the bases. I think a better approach is to speak in readable English directly to your users. If you are storing information, just explain why.” Being transparent will go a long way towards building your users’ trust – and hopefully, their business.

Photo credits: Flickr user Let Ideas Compete

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by Fabrizio Giordano - Published: July 9th, 2010 -

Loud3LogoAs social media and information overload spill out over the boundaries of old media’s monopoly on publishing, a big piece of the future will belong to the curators of the world. Some newspapers have scored headlines by calling new media organizations that curate content nothing more than parasitic aggregators – but not everyone is so shortsighted.

The New York Daily News invested $4 million this January in Loud3r, a content curation service built on top of extensive Natural Language Proccessing and other forms of technical analysis. The end result is a powerful tool than any curation geek would drool over. Already deployed by a small number of customers, Loud3r is generally available now. Check out the screenshots below of this new curation service that’s just dripping with cool features.

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Multi-media, content and keyword recommendations, topic disambiguation, turnable priority dials, social media analytics – this service offers a whole lot in a relatively easy-to-understand interface. The back-end isn’t the prettiest, but the output can come in any number of formats: on a hosted page, as XML that you can style up to run on your own site however you like, even as a stream of curated Tweets. In most cases users of these services fine-tune the settings and let the systems run on autopilot, chewing through thousands of discovered stories each day and publishing tens or hundreds.

This service is aimed at professional publishers, there’s a modest monthly fee per topic area you’re curating. Whether you’re in the target market or not, here’s a look at one of the most cutting-edge services in this emerging market.

Competitors include OneSpot and DayLife.

Your stream – made by hand
These screens are a demo Loud3r account set up to track content about the topic “data analysis.” Click any of the following screens for a larger pop-up.

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Project home page
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Keyword synonyms and blacklist

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Keyword recommendations

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Dial the filters up and down
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Sort the stream
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That’s a little look behind the scenes at Loud3r. There’s a whole lot there. The semantic and Natural Language Processing is the secret sauce, but throughout the service there are good features that any curation tool would benefit from including.

Are these kinds of tools the printing press of the 21st century? Original content will always be important, but it’s easier than ever to publish now. That means there are all kinds of opportunities to ad value built on top of the rushing river of news online.

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by Fabrizio Giordano - Published: July 2nd, 2010 -

Rhodes 2.0 è un sistema multipiattaforma per lo sviluppo di applicazioni per cellulari.

Scritto in ruby consente ai programmatori di avere un solo ambiente per Android, Blackberry, iPhone/iPad, Symbian, WebOS e Windows Mobile. Questa nuova versione è la prima ad includere il supporto per l’audio HD bidirezionale ed i video stream.

Le versioni precedenti erano disponibile in licenza GPLv3 o commerciale, mentre con questo rilascio è stata scelta la licenza MIT. La versione commerciale non esiste più, ma è stato introdotto il RhoSync synchronisation server in versione solo commerciale. L’azienda offre anche un ambiente di sviluppo SaaS, RhoHub. Dopo il salto un lungo video introdottivo.

Via | Rhomobile

Rhodes 2.0, sviluppare applicazioni per smartphone é stato pubblicato su ossblog alle 11:00 di giovedì 01 luglio 2010.

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