Green App Machine
Posts mit dem Label Meet werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Meet werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Meet the website Facebook is censoring from your News Feed

The most powerful social network on the planet just exerted its enormous control over the Internet to squash a potential competitor. Facebook, which just announced it averages one billion daily users, is actively censoring any mention of Tsu.co. The social media giant has accused the brash young startup of not complying with its spam policies and now cites every mention of the site made on Facebook, Messenger, or Instagram as spam, censoring any post that includes the site’s URL (Tsu, the popular Chinese name, is still permissible).


While the harsh blacklisting of the site might seem like Facebook using its power over online traffic to crush a newcomer, Tsu.co is no ordinary social media site. While Tsu, like Facebook, is supported by ad revenue, the website promises to give 90 percent of that money back to users who generate original content on the site. What this means is Tsu users have a financial incentive to promote their content more than the average Facebook or Instagram user, which can lead to spam or spam-like tactics for building traffic.


The social media giant has accused the brash young startup of not complying with its spam policies and now cites every mention of the site made on Facebook, Messenger, or Instagram as spam.



“We do not allow developers to incentivize content sharing on our platform because it encourages spammy sharing,” a Facebook spokesperson told CNNMoney. In fact, Facebook has promised to allow Tsu posts and mentions of the site if Tsu disables an app that allows users of Tsu (Tsusers?) to post content simultaneously to Tsu and Facebook.


This would make sense if Tsu were the only site working this way. For one, many social networks—like Bubblews, 3Tags, and even big players like YouTube—practice some level of content sharing with users. Second, Tsu works the way the Internet works. While most sites might not function in the paid-per-click model of Tsu, every content creator on any major site is at least in part being funded by ad revenue.


And there’s a very good chance that ad revenue is owed in part to a sophisticated marketing campaign through Facebook. Data analytics firm Parse.ly found an astonishing 43 percent of the traffic sent to its network of news sites came from Facebook, while Google only netted 38 percent. Similarly, a Pew Research Center report found 63 percent of Americans get their news from Facebook. Indeed, according to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, one out of every five minutes an American spends on a smartphone is spent within Facebook.


This impressive level of control over what content people see means any creator of anything online is highly dependent on Facebook for traffic. Note the mass freakout in the blogosphere when traffic driven by Facebook shares began to slump earlier this year and distinctly dive in August. Sites that rely quite heavily on Facebook shares—like Thought Catalog, BuzzFeed, or the Huffington Post—saw massive drops in Facebook shares starting this past summer, according to the Awl’s John Herman.


This fragile dependency, however, hasn’t stopped such sites from embracing Facebook wholesale, with big name brands like the one fourth of all referral traffic? Ignoring it means you’ll lose out on a large chunk of ad revenue—and being censored from it might even ruin you. As David Fagin wrote on the Huffington Post, “being blocked from Facebook in this day and age is the equivalent of being kicked off AT&T in the mid 70s.”


This is the dilemma Tsu users find themselves today, and precisely why Tsu’s CEO and founder Sebastian Sobczak and his users have taken such umbrage to Facebook’s decision to banish the company from its sites. CNN spoke to one user who posted 25 drawings of dogs every day on Tsu then advertised them for sale on Facebook—an estimated 7,500 dog drawings—before they were pulled for being malicious.


According to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, one out of every five minutes an American spends on a smartphone is spent within Facebook.



What such an onslaught of content can look a lot like is spam, defined by Facebook as “sending bulk messages, excessively posting links or images to people’s Timelines and sending friend requests to people you don’t know personally.” Much of that is implicit in the design of a site like Tsu. Because the site is both invite only and relatively unheard of, it makes sense that a segment of Tsu’s users would continually attempt to lure people on Facebook to engage with their content, as well as produce as much content as possible.


But Tsu hasn’t done anything evil by doing so. All the site has done is offer a “trickle down” version of the same business model that pays for much of the Internet. If Facebook users aren’t happy about Tsu, they likely aren’t happy about any from a long list of websites that purely exist to drive ad revenue. By blocking Tsu, Facebook is challenging the notion that users and platforms can do what publishers have been doing for a generation.


One reason for that is the editorial control publications have over their social media behavior. This isn’t just about making sure the site doesn’t post anything offensive, but also managing when and how often content is pushed through sites like Facebook. An individual Tsu user, tantalized by the promise of real money as they are, might not hold the same restraint and cross the thin line between marketing and spam.


Tsu can work. A single mother from South Carolina posted a series of videos singing her daughter to sleep each night, which went viral and earned her hundreds of dollars of spending money—later netting her a record deal. The website has also found popularity with several celebrities, such as rapper 50 Cent, who has over 131,000 followers on Tsu.


But this shouldn’t be surprising. The individuals on Tsu are attracted to the service because it streamlines the money-making scheme that has built the modern Internet—the more eyeballs, the more money. Facebook knows this story well, frequently topping lists of earners from digital ad revenue. All Tsu is doing is taking the same model that made Facebook—and many, many others—famously rich and trying to spread it out among millions of users. 


Ben Branstetter is a social commentator with a focus on the intersection of technology, security, and politics. His work has appeared in the Washington Post, Business Insider, Salon, the Week, and xoJane. He attended Pennsylvania State University.


Illustration by Max Fleishman



Meet the website Facebook is censoring from your News Feed

13 People To Meet At CMO Summit 2015 In Singapore

Those who aspire to the top marketing role in their organizations, and perhaps … With 20 years" experience in the marketing industry, Cummings was …



13 People To Meet At CMO Summit 2015 In Singapore

Meet the International Law marketing team

We are pleased to introduce the marketing team for International Law at Oxford University Press. Cailin, Jo, Erin, Jeni, Kathleen, and Ciara work with journals, online reference, and books which are key resources for students, scholars, and practitioners worldwide. The OUP portfolio in international law covers international criminal law, international human rights law, international economic and trade law, international environmental law, international humanitarian law, diplomacy, law of territory and statehood, law of the sea, criminal and transitional justice, history of international law, dispute settlement, foreign investment law, and more. Get to know more about the team below and continue following developments from the OUP International Law marketing team on Facebook.


Cailin Deery


cailindeery


What is your role in OUP’s International Law department?


I am the Marketing Manager of OUP’s international law journals and the leader of our social media strategy group.


What was your background before you started working at OUP?


I was studying literature and sociolinguistics at NC State University with the distant dream of working in publishing as a lexicographer. Thankfully, I had the good fortune to find myself in publishing much earlier than expected – a week after graduation – in Journals Marketing (undoubtedly a better fit for me!). I moved to the United Kingdom four years ago.


Who is your international law inspiration?


I am privileged to work with many inspiring international law academics through my journal editorial boards, so it’s difficult to choose one. I was very fortunate to know and work with Antonio Cassese on the Journal of International Criminal Justice, and he continues to be an inspiration.


What is the most exciting project you have been a part of while working at OUP?


Working with the international law group is truly among the most exciting projects I’ve been a part of at OUP. Working with the editorial boards of new journal launches is also very enjoyable and rewarding, whether the journal is brand new, such as the London Review of International Law or Journal of Law and the Biosciences – or in its early age – such as Journal of International Dispute Settlement or International Journal of Transitional Justice.


How would you sum up your job in three words?


Absorbing, collaborative, and forward-looking.


What is the strangest thing currently on your desk?


Nothing too strange at the moment, though I do have my desk covered with pictures and cards and have a mini lunchtime library accumulating.


What are you reading right now?


I’m finishing Girl in a Band by Kim Gordon, Kim’s memoir of her life leading up to the formation of Sonic Youth through their last show, and spent some of Saturday afternoon dipping into Susan Sontag’s On Photography essays.


Jo Wojtkowski


Jo WojtkowskiJo Wojtkowski

What is your role in OUP’s International Law department?


I am the Assistant Marketing Manager for the US Law Division. I work specifically on end-user marketing for our books and online products.


What was your background before you started working at OUP?


Before moving to the United States, I worked for OUP in our UK office, as a Senior Sales Executive and Account Manager for the law department. Prior to OUP, I was a Welfare Manager at an International English Language School based in Oxford, UK.


Who is your international law inspiration?


M. Cherif Bassiouni, often referred to by the media as “The Godfather of International Criminal Law” and a “war crimes expert.” Professor Bassiouni has been appointed to 22 United Nations positions including Chair and then member of the Commission of Inquiry for Libya, and Independent Expert on Human Rights for Afghanistan. He has served as a consultant to the US Department of State and Department of Justice on projects relating to international traffic of drugs, international control of terrorism, the defence of the US hostages in Iran, governance and democracy projects in the Middle East and North Africa, and the future of the Iraqi justice system.


Among the many distinctions, awards and medals he has received are the Nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize (1999); Hague Prize for International Law (2007); World Peace Through Law Award (2010); United Nations Association’s Adlai E. Stevenson Award (1993); and Stockholm Human Rights Award (2013).


I had the pleasure of working with Professor Bassiouni on the release of the Sixth Edition of International Extradition: United States Law and Practice.


What is the most exciting project you have been a part of while working at OUP?


The launch of our International Law Twitter channel: @OUPIntLaw. We started the account back in September 2013, and we now have over 3,000 followers. This was a real collaborative effort, involving many members of the marketing, editorial, and social media departments. Social media is still a relatively new area, so it was exciting to be one of the founding members of this channel.


How would you sum up your job in three words?


Collaborative, creative, diverse.


What is the strangest thing currently on your desk?


A stone-carved trinket box, in the shape of the African continent. One of the countries secretly opens the box. I will not tell you which one…but it begins with K!


What are you reading right now?


The New York Times #1 bestseller, The Kissing Hand by Audrey Penn. I have a four-month-old daughter and this is a bedtime story favorite in our house.


Erin Fegely


Erin FegelyErin Fegely

What is your role in OUP’s International Law team?


I am a Product Marketer and Brand Manager for a range of Oxford’s digital resources including the family of products on Oxford Public International Law.


What was your background before you started working at OUP?


I started at Oxford directly after graduating from Pennsylvania State University where I double-majored in Public Relations and International Studies with a French minor.


Who is your international law inspiration?


Although not technically a lawyer, I would be remiss not mention our own John Louth, Editor in Chief of Academic Law here at OUP. He is certainly one of my favourite individuals to brainstorm with! Outside of this, there is no one person that I would like to recognize, but I am always drawn to anything in the field of Human Rights and myself take a large interest in the work done to raise awareness of modern day slavery and human trafficking.


What is the most exciting project you have been a part of while working at OUP?


One of my favourite projects that I have been a part of since I started at OUP was the relaunch of Oxford Handbooks Online in the fall of 2012. We completely altered the publishing model and updated all site functionality. It was the first major relaunch I was able to manage and involved a lot of branding work and innovative digital marketing tools, including our first (and award-winning) digital brochure.


How would you sum up your job in three words?


Central communication hub


What is the strangest thing currently on your desk?


A strongly scented geranium (the ‘flavor’ is Attar of Rose) that I am trying very hard to keep alive!


What are you reading right now?


Depending on my mood, I am currently switching between The Circle by Dave Eggers; Bohemians, Bootleggers, Flappers, and Swells: The Best of Early Vanity Fair; and Nicholas Kristof’s A Path Appears.


Jeni Payne


Jeni PayneJeni Payne

What is your role in OUP’s International Law department?


I am the Marketing Manager of UK books for the International Law team.


What was your background before you started working at OUP?


After graduating from Lincoln University with a degree in Journalism and Media, my first job was at OUP as a Marketing Assistant. In 2003 I left to work at Blackwell Publishing where I worked on their nursing products, but five years ago, the opportunity to come back to work at OUP came up and I jumped at the chance.


What is the most exciting project you have been a part of while working at OUP?


To be honest, it is working with the International Law team. It is great to be able to work so closely with colleagues in different departments and countries, and to be part of a team that has the same goals and visions.


How would you sum up your job in three words?


Busy, diverse, and challenging


What is the strangest thing currently on your desk?


A half-chewed bike pedal that had to be replaced after my dog mistook it for a dog toy!


What are you reading right now?


I am re-reading The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham, which is one of my all-time favourite books.


Kathleen Sargeant


Kathleen SargeantKathleen Sargeant

What was your background before you started working at OUP?


Prior to joining the International Law team at OUP, I was studying English Literature and Modern History at the University of St Andrews.


Who is your international law inspiration?


My international law inspiration is Leora Bilsky, Professor of Law at Tel Aviv University. I find her study of Israeli political trials, and of the Adolf Eichmann trial in particular, fascinating. My MA dissertation considered the role of eyewitness testimony in different aspects of Holocaust studies, and I continue to be captivated by the part that witnesses play in international criminal tribunals.


What is the most exciting project you have been a part of while working at OUP?


I’ve been very lucky to have been involved in the creation and promotion of a number of themed article collections since joining the International Law team. The most exciting of these for me was a collection created in recognition of Human Rights Day 2014. This collection was so interesting because the articles we included covered many aspects of human rights law, and I was given the opportunity to work with some very talented authors during the process.


How would you sum up your job in three words?


Creative, varied, challenging


What is the strangest thing currently on your desk?


I am a huge fan of a decorated desk, and so mine is engulfed in weirdness. But the strangest item currently nestled amongst my myriad of postcards – and one photograph of Michael Redgrave – is a crooked blue elephant that I crocheted a while back. His name is Napoleon.


What are you reading right now?


I find it difficult to focus on one book at a time, probably because, as a student, I was often wading through volumes of poetry, alongside textbooks on the history of medicine, and the complete works of Bertolt Brecht. I am currently reading Sarah Waters’ new novel The Paying Guests, with regular breaks for My Swordhand is Singing (an old favourite) by Marcus Sedgwick.


Ciara O’Connor


Ciara O’ConnorCiara O’Connor

What is your role in OUP’s International Law department?


I’m a marketing associate for the US law division.


What was your background before you started working at OUP?


This is my first job after graduating from college in 2013. I previously interned with the World Affairs Council of Pittsburgh and at a law firm doing marketing and copywriting.


Who is your international law inspiration?


Yasmine Akbaba, one of my political science professors in college who got me interested in international relations during my freshman year and advised my senior seminar research on international relations and religion. She is a great teacher and mentor.


What is the most exciting project you have been a part of while working at OUP?


I’ve enjoyed preparing for the American Society of International Law’s annual meeting in April. There are a lot of logistics but I’m excited to see everything come together and to highlight our new international law books.


How would you sum up your job in three words?


Unpredictable, fun, and challenging


What is the strangest thing currently on your desk?


Three empty flower vases left behind by the person who used to sit at my desk. She must have been very popular!


What are you reading right now?


The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins. I’m about half way through and can’t wait to see how it ends.


Headline image credit: Sky. CC0 via Pixabay.



Meet the International Law marketing team