Enter The Net

Sustainable Internet Marketing

Archive for December, 2009

pew-logoOver the years, I have often referred to results of studies conducted by the Pew Internet and American Life Research group. I am fascinated by the social and cultural impact of the internet on our lives. I guess that’s what I get for being a relatively older internet geek. I actually remember life before it existed!

Pew recently invited me to take a survey asking about my predictions for the internet and our lives over the next ten years. I had fun answering the questions and pondering the ideas that are currently being tossed around.

The survey is open for anyone who has a stake in the internet. Click the link below and use PIN 1000 to add your two cents. The survey takes around 20 minutes to complete.

http://survey.confirmit.com/wix/p1075078513.aspx

I hope that you had a satisfying and fruitful holiday!

I wandered all around the Portland area, hitting various family functions, exchanging gifts and enjoying a day when I had promised not to even turn my computer on. This morning, December 26, I found a nice “gift email” from Google – something I have asked for more often than the kid asked for the Red Rider BB Gun – a way to make “notes” right on my Google Analytics graphs!

Woo woo!

Ok, my geekiness is showing again. But, before you write me off as just another kid excited about a new toy, let me explain – with Google’s help – why this is so cool, and what it means to you.

Google Analytics is a powerful system for tracking all sorts of metrics about your website. You can track visits, visitors, sources of traffic, keywords used to get people to your site, popular and unpoular pages, where your visitors live and much more. You can then break down data to figure out what works and what doesn’t related to your advertising, site design or anything else you control.

But the greatest thing about Google Analytics is that it is web-based. Armed with your account email address and a password, you can access your stats for any time period, from any computer. You can also grant access to multiple people. This feature, however, also exposes one of the biggest problems with Google Analytics.

It is easiest to explain this with an example. In the figure below, you can see visits to a small site over a period of about one week. The thing that really stands out is the spike in visits on December 3. Because I own the site, I know that this spike is the result of an email broadcast that took place early in the morning of that day. However, in one month – or one year – I may forget. I could download the data into Excel and add a notation for that day, but then I have defeated the whole web-based advantage of Google Analytics by requiring me to access an Excel file on my main computer to be able to see ALL of my data – including the notation about the spike on December 3rd.

What caused the spike on December 3?

What caused the spike on December 3?

What would be great is a way to make a notation right in my Google Analytics account that would always be there whenever I log in. Google’s gift to us Analytics geeks is just that – they call it Annotations. Here is Google’s video explaining how it works:

Oh Emm Gee! How cool! Like any kid who gets a sniff as to what the gift is, I tore open the paper with reckless abandon (I cut a beeline to my Google Analytics account.) But it was the same old thing – no annotations. No little tab available to add them. What the heck?

Well, a little digging among the discarded wrapping paper revealed the classic Xmas gift maneuver – an IOU.

Google says:

“Annotations is rolling out a bit slower than planned due to the holidays. New features within Google Analytics are launched on a phased roll out due to the volume of accounts, and the demands of testing as we activate the new feature. Usually this process takes from a few days to a few weeks, depending on the feature. Annotations is being activated to an additional 10% of accounts each week and will be pushed live to all accounts by mid January.”

Hey, I understand, Google. As a classic December 24 gift shopper, I have been stuck having to tell someone on Christmas Day that their gift is “on the way.” I also understand the desire to give the gift, anyway. Clearly, I think it is pretty cool, and according to the comments you are getting on your posts, I am not alone.

And it’s not like you don’t give out pretty good gifts (Calendar, Gmail, Wave, iGoogle, Alerts) anyway. So, I will be checking my account about three times per day to see if I am one of the lucky few to get annotations before the mid-January.

Thanks Google, for the cool gift – even if it is just an IOU.

>> Interested in learning more about Google Analytics? Click HERE.

fb-virusBy BRAD STONE
Published: December 13, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO — It used to be that computer viruses attacked only your hard drive. Now they attack your dignity.

Malicious programs are rampaging through Web sites like Facebook and Twitter, spreading themselves by taking over people’s accounts and sending out messages to all of their friends and followers. The result is that people are inadvertently telling their co-workers and loved ones how to raise their I.Q.’s or make money instantly, or urging them to watch an awesome new video in which they star.

“I wonder what people are thinking of me right now?” said Matt Marquess, an employee at a public relations firm in San Francisco whose Twitter account was recently hijacked, showering his followers with messages that appeared to offer a $500 gift card to Victoria’s Secret.

Mr. Marquess was clueless about the offers until a professional acquaintance asked him about them via e-mail. Confused, he logged in to his account and noticed he had been promoting lingerie for five days.

“No one had said anything to me,” he said. “I thought, how long have I been Twittering about underwear?”

The humiliation sown by these attacks is just collateral damage. In most cases, the perpetrators are hoping to profit from the referral fees they get for directing people to sketchy e-commerce sites.

In other words, even the crooks are on social networks now — because millions of tightly connected potential victims are just waiting for them there.

Often the victims lose control of their accounts after clicking on a link “sent” by a friend. In other cases, the bad guys apparently scan for accounts with easily guessable passwords. (Mr. Marquess gamely concedes that his password at the time was “abc123.”)

After discovering their accounts have been seized, victims typically renounce the unauthorized messages publicly, apologizing for inadvertently bombarding their friends. These messages — one might call them Tweets of shame — convey a distinct mix of guilt, regret and embarrassment.

“I have been hacked; taking evasive maneuvers. Much apology, my friends,” wrote Rocky Barbanica, a producer for Rackspace Hosting, an Internet storage firm, in one such note.

Mr. Barbanica sent that out last month after realizing he had sent messages to 250 Twitter followers with a link and the sentence, “Are you in this picture?” If they clicked, their Twitter accounts were similarly commandeered.

“I took it personally, which I shouldn’t have, but that’s the natural feeling. It’s insulting,” he said.

Earlier malicious programs could also cause a similar measure of embarrassment if they spread themselves through a person’s e-mail address book.

But those messages, traveling from computer to computer, were more likely to be stopped by antivirus or firewall software. On the Web, such measures offer little protection. (Although they are popularly referred to as viruses or worms, the new forms of Web-based malicious programs do not technically fall into those categories, as they are not self-contained programs.)

Getting tangled up in a virus on a social network is also more painfully, and instantaneously, public. “Once it’s delivered to everyone in three seconds, the cat is out of the bag,” said Chet Wisniewski of Sophos, a Web security firm. “When people got viruses on their computers, or fell for scams at home, they were generally the only ones that knew about it and they cleaned it up themselves. It wasn’t broadcast to the whole world.”

Social networks have become prime targets of such programs’ creators for good reason, security experts say. People implicitly trust the messages they receive from friends, and are inclined to overlook the fact that, say, their cousin from Ohio is extremely unlikely to have caught them on a hidden webcam.

Sophos says that 21 percent of Web users report that they have been a target of malicious programs on social networks. Kaspersky Labs, a Russian security firm, says that on some days, one in 500 links on Twitter point to bad sites that can infect an inadequately protected computer with typical viruses that jam hard drives. Kaspersky says many more links are purely spam, frequently leading to dating sites that pay referral fees for traffic.

A worm that spread around Facebook recently featured a photo of a sparsely dressed woman and offered a link to “see more.” Adi Av, a computer developer in Ashkelon, Israel, encountered the image on the Facebook page of a friend he considered to be a reliable source of amusing Internet content.

A couple of clicks later, the image was posted on Mr. Av’s Facebook profile and sent to the “news feed” of his 350 friends.

“It’s an honest mistake,” he said. “The main embarrassment was from the possibility of other people getting into the same trouble from my profile page.”

Others confess to experiencing a more serious discomfiture.

“You feel like a total idiot,” said Jodi Chapman, who last month unwisely clicked on a Twitter message from a fellow vegan, suggesting that she take an online intelligence test.

Ms. Chapman, who sells environmentally friendly gifts with her husband, uses her Twitter account to communicate with thousands of her company’s customers. The hijacking “filled me with a sense of panic,” she said. “I was so worried that I had somehow tainted our company name by asking people to check their I.Q. scores.”

Social networking attacks do not spare the experts. Two weeks ago, Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet and American Life Project, a nonprofit research group, accidentally sent messages to dozens of his Twitter followers with a link and the line, “Hi, is this you? LOL.” He said a few people actually clicked.

“I’m worried that people will think I communicate this way,” Mr. Rainie said. “ ‘LOL,’ as my children would tell you, is not the style that I want to engage the world with.”

Originally printed in the New York Times. Click here for full article.

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About Me

Enter The Net is the passion of Rob Patton. Rob is a successful internet marketing consultant who combines his passion for helping all businesses succeed on the Web with his love of teaching. In addition to running Enter The Net, Rob is a part time instructor at the Clackamas Small Business Development Center. Rob is a proud member of River City LeTip and the Portland Area Business Association.

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